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#11. Posted:
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Joined: May 10, 201212Year Member
Posts: 3,129
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Status: Offline
Joined: May 10, 201212Year Member
Posts: 3,129
Reputation Power: 451
Forest wroteShiv wroteMiss wroteMitochondria wrote $700 can get you something for really lightweight gaming $800 pushes the limit of decent performance and storage. What games are you looking to play in specific?
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Either or will suite you well for daily use, but as for gaming go with the gaming edition, if you want i mean lightweight unless they are CPU based games, go for the 2 in 1.
Thanks for the links, man. And to be honest, it will be extremely light gaming. Talking like emulators mainly, maybe a few new games (Rainbow Six Siege, Maybe Rocket League, BioShock, etc.) And a lot of older PC games (Army Men, Battlefront, etc.)
Them 2-in-1's are horrible.
They're not too terrible anymore, I enjoy my yoga 2 pro and at the time it was able to play some games at a decent fps at low-med settings. Since the majority of games seem to be emulators, and older titles a 2-in-1 is a pretty good choice.
[ Register or Signin to view external links. ] Is a good choice if you're looking to do some more serious gaming, and it's just under $700
Comes with an I5, 12GB ram, 256GB SSD, and a 950M so it's a bit better than integrated graphics. Benchmarks here [ Register or Signin to view external links. ]
My post was about the Inspiron 2-in-1's that were linked above. Some 2-in-1's are actually decent with good performance, for the right money of course.
I know the OP said they would only be doing light gaming but still -
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#12. Posted:
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Joined: Nov 24, 201311Year Member
Posts: 3,686
Reputation Power: 12027
Status: Offline
Joined: Nov 24, 201311Year Member
Posts: 3,686
Reputation Power: 12027
Shiv wroteForest wroteShiv wroteMiss wroteMitochondria wrote $700 can get you something for really lightweight gaming $800 pushes the limit of decent performance and storage. What games are you looking to play in specific?
[ Register or Signin to view external links. ]
[ Register or Signin to view external links. ]
Either or will suite you well for daily use, but as for gaming go with the gaming edition, if you want i mean lightweight unless they are CPU based games, go for the 2 in 1.
Thanks for the links, man. And to be honest, it will be extremely light gaming. Talking like emulators mainly, maybe a few new games (Rainbow Six Siege, Maybe Rocket League, BioShock, etc.) And a lot of older PC games (Army Men, Battlefront, etc.)
Them 2-in-1's are horrible.
They're not too terrible anymore, I enjoy my yoga 2 pro and at the time it was able to play some games at a decent fps at low-med settings. Since the majority of games seem to be emulators, and older titles a 2-in-1 is a pretty good choice.
[ Register or Signin to view external links. ] Is a good choice if you're looking to do some more serious gaming, and it's just under $700
Comes with an I5, 12GB ram, 256GB SSD, and a 950M so it's a bit better than integrated graphics. Benchmarks here [ Register or Signin to view external links. ]
My post was about the Inspiron 2-in-1's that were linked above. Some 2-in-1's are actually decent with good performance, for the right money of course.
I know the OP said they would only be doing light gaming but still -
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The benchmarks for the laptop if you are doing light gaming is fine, intel graphics work good on CPU optimized games on low/high take ASAMU for example or Overwatch both are CPU driven fairly well.
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