As someone that's been buying gaming laptops since early 2000s (earliest I remember was a Multivision Ionix), and someone that's fooled about with Calman and TV calibration, I really appreciate the detailed reviews here. Thanks for your write up. :D
Interesting that they use different panels. May be a regional difference, yes.
Most Gaming-Laptops in comparison are lighter and smaller in dimensions. Your Clevo with its desktop processor and almost 10 lbs of weight is clearly an extreme exception. :)
In Games most people report a significant difference even between 144 Hz and 240 Hz. But it depends more on how clearly the picture is displayed on fast movements without smearing effects and such, but this is a display-deep-dive we cannot offer unfortunately.
Coming from my previous laptop (PC Specialist Octane/Clevo P775TM1-G) ,which was only about 3 years old, one of the first things that impressed me with the GP76 was the smaller size and weight of both the powerpack and the laptop itself. Funny that they were both negative points in your review. -so your impressions with this aspect will clearly depend on what you've transitioned from.
There is generally high praise for the responsive 360Hz screen, but in gaming use, I see no difference between it and my previous 144Hz screen. (I didn't actually want another FHD screen, but the price and all other specs were what I wanted so it was a trade off)
Finally, HWiNFO64 reports my screen as a Sharp SHP1544 LQ173M1JW08, not an AUO model as specified in your review; maybe a regional difference? -I bought my GP76 12UGS from a UK vendor.
Only one thing counts with the new MSI Vector GP76 gaming laptop: speed! A 360 Hz display with a real response time of 4ms (gray to gray), a 150 W TGP Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 Ti and an Alder Lake Intel Core i7-12700H all come together in an almost unbeatable package.