Why gaming laptops?

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SUPA FRANKY

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I use my laptop to watch workout videos, and I have a tendency to move around my house, so a laptop is pretty much a necessity.
 

coheedswicked

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exactly this... i have a gaming laptop... would much prefer a desktop but its just not feasible right now to be lugging around and despite gaming laptops being heavy (about 9 lbs i think for mine)its much lighter than a gaming desktop at 40-50lbs. and much more portable. i can just put my laptop, power cord and mouse into my bookbag.
 

Flyingchciken93

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I currently have a laptop and a computer neither of which is especially good for gaming but both are mediocre all round, im debating whether to sell my laptop and get a gaming one and keep my computer for others stuff or buy a gaming computer and keep the laptop for other stuff. Any suggestions either way??
 

teisjm

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I got mine for several reasons

1. I already have an more or less equally powerfull gameing PC
2. I can use the specs in it, to have a portable PC capable of working 3d graphics programs.
3. I can bring it to work, and the nature of my job allows me to spend somewhere between 2-4 hours durring a 7 hour shift of my work time playing games/working with 3d.
4. I can easily bring it along to friends places, unlike my stationary computer, which is stuc at my appartment unless i have acces to a car.
5. While a complete luxury, and not an actual buying point, having acces to 2 computers capable of running games is nice, when having friends over.
 

C95J

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Apr 10, 2010
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I use a gaming laptop because it is very small, very easy to carry and suits me fine. I don't care if I could buy a bit of a better desktop for the same price, I prefer to be able to carry my laptop around all the time.

Overheating is never a problem with my laptop as well, so that definitely isn't an issue.
 

Zeekar

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Jun 1, 2009
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I agree that a gaming laptop is generally a bad idea. From personal experience, I've had one, and it goes obsolete far quicker than a self-built PC. Plus, it is more susceptible to damage.

To answer the question, though -- why you'd want one -- from the perspective of someone in college who lives with a girlfriend that hogs the main computer all the time, it seems like a really great thing to have!

No more explanation needed, I think.
 

IronStorm9

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DarthScorpio11 said:
IronStorm9 said:
Maybe these people are in college and don't want to have to lug an entire desktop + monitor out of storage every year.
<---- Is a college sophomore and wants desperately to own a gaming laptop, but has nowhere near the funds.
ummm...why not. I'm in college, and have grant money. I had a little over 1000 left over for the semester, so i brought myself a gaming laptop :)
Keyword: Sophomore. I only budget about $1000 for the entire year. That includes meals and my meds. I also don't have grant money
 

crudus

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Kanlic said:
crudus said:
Like I stated in the OP, just get an ultraportable or a regular laptop. It will be half of the weight at least(a tenth if you get the ultraportable).
You're forgetting how small college dorms are. There is barely enough space for essential things like storage for clothing and stuff, but there is NO room for a rig.
Really? My friends and I managed to stuff four desktops into a dorm room(sure monitors were sitting on laps, but we did it!). There were two desktops in most dorm room at my college.

Saulkar said:
At the same time I can max out a heavily modded Just Cause 2 if I am feeling gamee while waiting for those damn magical things called fish my grandfather promises me will bite the bait. :D
Ok, I can understand the people who have to go to 30 countries in a year, but I don't understand this. Why go fishing if you are going to just play your computer anyway? It almost seems to miss the point entirely unless you have a LAN going on your fishing boat.

Blazingdragoon04 said:
It's pretty easy to see that the numbers that you are getting, 700 dollars for a gaming desktop, is based ENTIRELY around building the computer yourself, though you never once mention it.
Yes I do. In everyone but one of my posts in this thread.

Kalezian said:
Putting it that way though makes it sound like an addiction.
In the end, I think this is the thing I am having trouble wrapping my head around. I had many people quote me (I just got done going through 15!) and say "so I can play games on the here, here, here, and here". It makes me think "why is it necessary to play there (regardless of the device you have)"? Yes, there are the people who travel a lot, and I can understand that. Although the people who say "so I can play WoW/Crysis/Just Cause 2 at McDonalds, in lectures, or waiting for a bus" (may or may not be actual examples in this thread), really make it hard to understand where they are coming from.

Zeekar said:
To answer the question, though -- why you'd want one -- from the perspective of someone in college who lives with a girlfriend that hogs the main computer all the time, it seems like a really great thing to have!
The laptop or the girlfriend?
 

Sateru

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Jul 11, 2010
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I work as a caregiver in someone else's house during the night, which means I just clean shit (sometimes literally cleaning fecal matter off of the bathroom walls). So I have a laptop... It's not quite a gaming one, but it can play some games pretty well (I have Fallout 3 and NV along with Dragon Age). I just like the portability, and the fact that I can easily take it to work with me. In fact, it is my major console of choice, even trumping the DSi, and PSP as a preference. When I get home, I don't really wanna get on a desktop, or be on an video game console. I just wanna get to bed. So yeah...
 

ShatteredBlack

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Feb 9, 2010
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I have a gaming laptop, and my reason for having it is simple.

I do FIFO(Fly-in, Fly-out)-work in Western Australian mines. A side effect of having so many 'rough' men in one place is that all minesites have to be 'dry' to prevent idiots ruining everything.

So, I bring my laptop + mouse + power cord for each 2-week stint up north, which I couldn't do with a desktop. I can take it with me relatively easily, but when I get home I can hook it up to external monitor, keyboard and speakers and I have a mid- to high-end desktop machine.

It's simply the most reasonable thing to do.
 

Tim_Buoy

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WanderingFool said:
Tim_Buoy said:
some people just don't want to have to deal with 2 machines simple. Or they're like me and my family which like to game with each other during family get togethers and don't want to lug around monitors and a tower everytime.
That was my reason for buying my ASUS laptop. I could have baught a cheaper laptop, but as the money was not my "own" (long story short, mother anf father controlled my purse strings), there was no way I could convice them to buy a desktop for gaming. Needing a laptop for school, and not being able to swing for a gaming desktop, a gaming laptop was my answer. A gaming laptop is not perfect, but it is a reasonable option if you dont want to fuck with two computers.

Though, I dont play too many PC games, all the ones I own are Oblivion, FO3, COD:BO, Homefront, and Brink, as well as a few F2P MMOs ive tried.
Really? i bought an asus as well. What model did you get.
 

Azure-Supernova

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Aug 5, 2009
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crudus said:
EdwardOrchard said:
-Versatility. You can play high-end games with maxed out graphics, play movies and music, you can even write your thesis.
-Portability. Whether you're in your room, in the classroom (am I the only one who played WoW during boring lectures?), or on the GO-train for your hour long commute.
-Accessibility of Wifi. Even Gulak's Meat House on the floor above the corner-store has free wireless these days.
Versatility: A desktop can do those things.
Portability: The lecture thing sounds like a bad idea. While I can't refute gaming on a train, I will say it isn't the only thing you can do on a train.
The third thing: A regular laptop can do that. Also, do you really need to have internet access 24/7 wherever you are?
Hell I've built Micro ATX desktops that perform better than a decent ASUS I checked it against and carried all of those benefits (again except the train one). Wireless cards are cheap as chips nowadays.
 

Kanlic

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crudus said:
Really? My friends and I managed to stuff four desktops into a dorm room(sure monitors were sitting on laps, but we did it!). There were two desktops in most dorm room at my college.
Well maybe your room was bigger, but I am finding it hard to stuff three people into our already small room. Anyways, another reason why I justify my laptop for gaming purposes is that I like to keep all my stuff in one place. Having to juggle my information between two computers would cause a headache for me. Besides, I've had some pretty sick League of Legends games based solely on the ability to gather a 5 person team in one room via laptops
 

azzurro27

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Nov 23, 2009
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I don't have a full on gaming laptop but it has a decent gfx card and is more than enough to play DA:O, fable 3, f1 2010, starcraft 2, assassins creed 2 smoothly on decent settings (max for DA;O but that's not too hard).

I bought it instead of upgrading my pc because I wanted a machine I could keep all my media on, do assignments on, play games on and surf the net on. I can do all of this without having to restricted myself to a single room in the house and I like that everything is on the one machine. I get that the post is about 'Gaming laptops' but id say the reason is the same, you want something you can do everything on, it doesn't have to be ultra portable to be way more versatile.
 
Feb 9, 2011
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I use to do my gaming from laptops and did so through the course of three different machines. I loved how portable it was since my group jumped from house-to-house for various LAN parties - it also doubled as my school laptop for taking notes in classes. However, the cost doesn't justify the cost anymore and I've switched back to desktop gaming and I'm never going back. My desktop blows any gaming laptop out of the water and it was half the cost.
 

Saulkar

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Because I choose to. It is called free will and I exercise it.
 

Saulkar

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Besides, the other things I mentioned that you snipped also reasonably justify getting one.
 

WanderingFool

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Tim_Buoy said:
WanderingFool said:
Tim_Buoy said:
some people just don't want to have to deal with 2 machines simple. Or they're like me and my family which like to game with each other during family get togethers and don't want to lug around monitors and a tower everytime.
That was my reason for buying my ASUS laptop. I could have baught a cheaper laptop, but as the money was not my "own" (long story short, mother anf father controlled my purse strings), there was no way I could convice them to buy a desktop for gaming. Needing a laptop for school, and not being able to swing for a gaming desktop, a gaming laptop was my answer. A gaming laptop is not perfect, but it is a reasonable option if you dont want to fuck with two computers.

Though, I dont play too many PC games, all the ones I own are Oblivion, FO3, COD:BO, Homefront, and Brink, as well as a few F2P MMOs ive tried.
Really? i bought an asus as well. What model did you get.
ASUS G60 series.
 

Zeekar

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Jun 1, 2009
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crudus said:
The laptop or the girlfriend?
Nice one.

Seriously, though. If you need to take your computing power WITH YOU anywhere, and your main computing power at home is shared, a gaming laptop makes sense. Generally, though, I agree with you that it's pretty pointless.

It's nice to be able to know that you have something that can run anything when your main computer is in use, especially if it has the dual purpose of being portable.