Asus ROG G752VT review
Asus ROG G752VT review Welcome to a Laptop AC Adapter specialist of the Msi Ac Adapter
At IFA 2015, Europe’s biggest consumer electronics show, Asus took the wraps off its new line-up of gaming notebooks. While the water-cooled GX700 took the spotlight, it’s the G752 that really matters. Asus’ mainstream gaming notebook has become incredibly popular.
The new model deviates from the design of recent systems, ditching matte black in favor of a three-tone look of dark silver, bronze, and black. That may not seem like much of a shift, but Asus’ old formula worked well; any change is a risk.
Inside, the story is familiar. Intel’s new Core i7-6700HQ wth adapter such as MSI Wind L1600 Ac Adapter, MSI Wind U100 Ac Adapter, LG E500 Ac Adapter, LG P300 Ac Adapter, MSI PR320 Ac Adapter, MSI EX600 Ac Adapter, MSI Wind X620 Ac Adapter, MSI A6000 Ac Adapter, Toshiba PA3282U-2ACA Ac Adapter, Toshiba PA3377E-1ACA Ac Adapter, Toshiba Satellite 4000 Ac Adapter, Toshiba Satellite M60 Ac Adapteris the only significant change. Otherwise, our entry-level review unit arrived with an Nvidia GTX 970M graphics chip, 16GB of RAM, two hard drives, a 128GB SATA drive, and a 1TB mechanical disk. G-Sync is now standard on all versions, too.
Pricing starts at $1,800. While that’s not inexpensive, on its face it seems a reasonable price for a powerful gaming rig. The real question is not whether the G752’s hardware can deliver, but whether the new design can live up to previous models.
Asus was an early adopter of the matte black aesthetic that now dominates so many gaming notebooks, and the success of its hardware is, I think, partially responsible for the look’s prevalence. That’s a compliment to the company, but it also posed a problem. Recent Asus notebooks have started to look like everything else.
That’s not what the Republic of Gamers brand is about, so Asus has shifted to silver and bronze, a color combo that — as far as I can remember, anyway — has never been used by any company in the business of selling gaming PCs.
The new design works at a glance thanks to Asus’ use of brushed metal, which endows the G752VT with an effortless class. It’s archaic, but in a good way, as if the notebook is some ancient device built by a race far more enlightened than humanity.
Unfortunately, the first impression is slighted by the interior, which looks as if it was designed by an entirely different company. The clean lines that define the exterior are exchanged for a jumped mess of angles. Large, uneven panel gaps make matters worse, and cheapen the feel of the system. I’m also puzzled as to why red interior LED lighting carries over now that bronze is the accent color of choice.
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