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Asus Vivo Pro Book 15

Asus Vivo Pro Book 15

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sunemoonsong
Senior Member
380
12-17-2022, 05:00 PM
#1
Hello.
I’m wondering if the Asus Vivo Pro Book 15 with a Ryzen 5800H, Rtx 3050 and 16 GB RAM is suitable for gaming?
I’m looking for a laptop under $900 with a 100% SRGB display and solid build quality—especially avoiding any wobble.
I came across this model featuring an OLED screen and a fast response time (0.02 ms), which made me think it could perform well in games. It’s priced around $750, so I’m curious about your thoughts on its gaming capabilities.
Thank you.
S
sunemoonsong
12-17-2022, 05:00 PM #1

Hello.
I’m wondering if the Asus Vivo Pro Book 15 with a Ryzen 5800H, Rtx 3050 and 16 GB RAM is suitable for gaming?
I’m looking for a laptop under $900 with a 100% SRGB display and solid build quality—especially avoiding any wobble.
I came across this model featuring an OLED screen and a fast response time (0.02 ms), which made me think it could perform well in games. It’s priced around $750, so I’m curious about your thoughts on its gaming capabilities.
Thank you.

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Tico_32
Senior Member
680
12-18-2022, 09:15 PM
#2
No Laptop suits well for gaming, but heat becomes its biggest issue. You can find compact desktops such as micro-ATX units with matching cases. Mixing AMD and Nvidia offers a compromise, yet it’s not ideal these days. Nvidia is lowering prices while fake tracing techniques are used, whereas AMD struggles with high temperatures and faulty drivers. Intel faces low stock speeds and eco cores, while AMD deals with similar problems. Gaming laptops cost about 50% more than desktops, so a decent desktop around $2000 would translate to roughly $3000 for a laptop of similar power. This is the wrong choice for the right reasons.
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Tico_32
12-18-2022, 09:15 PM #2

No Laptop suits well for gaming, but heat becomes its biggest issue. You can find compact desktops such as micro-ATX units with matching cases. Mixing AMD and Nvidia offers a compromise, yet it’s not ideal these days. Nvidia is lowering prices while fake tracing techniques are used, whereas AMD struggles with high temperatures and faulty drivers. Intel faces low stock speeds and eco cores, while AMD deals with similar problems. Gaming laptops cost about 50% more than desktops, so a decent desktop around $2000 would translate to roughly $3000 for a laptop of similar power. This is the wrong choice for the right reasons.