Pros & Cons
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- Impressive performance.
- Fancy backlit keyboard.
- Exceptional battery life.
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- Just a tick under 30 fps for full-tilt gaming.
- Big and heavy.
MSI GT70 0NC-011US Specs
| 2nd Graphics Card: | Intel HD Graphics 4000 |
| 3-D BENCHMARK TESTS - 3DMark06 - 1,024 x 768 - Default: | 20594 |
| 3-D BENCHMARK TESTS - 3DMark06 - Native – 0X/4X: | 13386 |
| Battery Type: | 87 Whr (Watt hours) |
| CineBench 11.5 Multimedia Tests: | 6.26 |
| Crysis - High quality - Native - AA/AF= 0X/4X: | 19.5 |
| Crysis - Medium quality - 1,024 x 768 - AA/AF=Off/Off: | 99 |
| Graphics Card: | Nvidia GeForce GTX 670M |
| Graphics Memory: | 3072 |
| Handbrake Multimedia Tests: | 1:18 min:sec |
| Lost Planet 2 (DX9) - High quality - Native - AA/AF= 0X/4X: | 36.7 |
| Lost Planet 2 (DX9) - Middle quality - 1,024 x 768- AA/AF=Off/Off: | 109.2 |
| MobileMark 2007 – Standard Battery Productivity Load (hrs:min): | 5:29 |
| MobileMark 2007- Performance score: | 380 |
| MULTIMEDIA TESTS - PhotoShop CS5: | 3:22 min:sec |
| Native Resolution: | 1920 x 1080 |
| Networking Options: | 802.11n |
| Operating System: | Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium |
| PCMark Vantage: | 4375 |
| Primary Optical Drive: | Blu-Ray Disc |
| Processor Name: | Intel Core i7-3610QM |
| Processor Speed: | 2.3 GHz |
| RAM: | 16 GB |
| Rotation Speed: | SSD |
| Screen Size: | 17.3 inches |
| Screen Type: | Widescreen |
| Storage Capacity (as Tested): | 128 + 750 GB |
| Tech Support: | 2 years. |
| Type: | Gaming |
| Weight: | 8.3 lb |
| Wireless Display Capability (WiDi): | No |
| WWAN (Mobile Broadband): | None |
All the motivational posters in PC Labs say, "Press the Turbo Button." The MSI GT70 model 0NC-011US ($1,999.99 direct)
Priced $600 below the
Design
The MSI GT70 has a handsome, typically bulky (2.2 by 16.9 by 11.3 inches, HWD) black case with brushed aluminum lid and palm rest and plastic sides and bottom. A light-up MSI logo mid-lid serves to intimidate, or at least inform, your opponents.
The glossy plastic around the 17.3-inch screen is somewhat reflective, but the matte-finish display itself is not. It's a full HD (1,920 by 1,080) panel with vivid colors, jet blacks, and ample brightness. MSI ships the system with text and icons set to 125 percent size for squint-free viewing, but you can change them back to 100 percent via Windows' Control Panel.
The black tile- or chiclet-style keyboard offers a first-class, slightly clicky typing feel and full-sized numeric keypad, though we were disappointed that Home and End are doubled up on the PgUp and PgDn keys. There is no context-menu key, either; the Windows key is moved to its place, out of gamers' way. While there are no special gaming keys, the SteelSeries keyboard supports up to 10 simultaneous key actions as well as left, center, and right backlighting zones; a supplied utility lets you choose backlight colors or wavy or pulsating ("breathing") light effects. The touchpad and its twin mouse buttons work smoothly.
Touch-sensitive LEDs above the keyboard include the aforementioned Turbo Drive button; a Cooler Boost button that increases fan speed—causing cacophonous fan noise—when the action gets hot and heavy; keyboard backlight and Wi-Fi toggles; a screen blanker; and the eject button for the Blu-ray burner. Some of these, like the options in an S-Bar software utility/program launcher that hovers at the top of the screen, duplicate items on the function keys. Always looking to pare down bloatware, we turned off S-Bar, only to find the optical drive eject button stopped working and there's no physical button on the drive itself. At least right-clicking the drive and selecting Eject in Windows Explorer still worked.
Features
Next to the Blu-ray drive on the MSI's right side are two USB 2.0 ports, with three USB 3.0 ports plus a memory-card reader and four audio jacks—headphone, microphone, line-in, and line-out—on the laptop's left. At the rear are VGA, HDMI, eSATA, and Ethernet ports.
Windows 7 Home Premium and the GT70's software preload—a handful of utilities, Microsoft Office and Trend Micro Titanium Internet Security trials, and Magix photo, video, and music managers—leave 70GB of the RAID SSD drive C: available. A recovery partition leaves 687GB free of the D: hard drive. MSI backs the GT70 with a two-year limited warranty.
Intel Wireless Display (WiDi) is missing, but Bluetooth and 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi are present on the wireless front. Two Dynaudio speakers and a subwoofer crank out fairly loud, fairly bass-worthy sound.
Performance
When it came to multimedia, the GT70 finished our
In our game testing with Turbo Drive Engine enabled, the MSI flirted with the magic three-figure frames-per-second mark at medium settings (1,024 by 768) in our
The GT70's battery life is remarkable: Its 87Wh battery lasted for 5 hours 29 minutes in our MobileMark 2007 rundown test. That's mainstream desktop replacement territory, virtually unheard of for a gaming laptop.
Overall, its few frames under 30 fps in high-quality tests are all that keep the MSI GT70 0NC-011US from unseating the more expensive GT783-625US as our under-$3,000 gaming laptop Editors' Choice. If you're willing to give up a little resolution or eye candy (as in Unigine's Heaven 3.0 benchmark, which posted 35.2 fps without anti-aliasing), the GT70 should run the toughest DX11 games, and its cutting-edge CPU and storage system make it an exceptional multimedia and productivity performer.
BENCHMARK TEST RESULTS:
COMPARISON TABLE
More laptop reviews:
Final Thoughts
MSI GT70 0NC-011US
Intel's new "Ivy Bridge" CPU and a super-trick SSD RAID storage system make MSI's GT70 0NC-011US laptop a hardcore gamer's bargain at $2,000.