Quote from: NikoB on April 05, 2024, 11:39:33What I wrote about back in early 2024 was......written many months on many different places, before you wrote anything anywhere. Such as this from November 17, 2023:
QuoteKnowing that:
- There aren't going to be any new AMD CPUs
- There aren't going to be any new Nvidia dGPUs
- ASUS has historically not fixed any of the core design issues in their laptops (meaning I wouldn't expect them to start now)
- You'll be far more likely to find a good deal on an "old" laptop rather than a brand-new one
I would have no qualms about looking at buying a 2023 model (as long as it came with a Zen 4 CPU, that is)
QuoteDon't Buy a 2024 Gaming Laptop - Top 3 Reasonswww.youtube.com/watch?v=8XY1NibKU1M
Quoteauthor=PC Gamer link=msg=576356 date=1707606633slope gameIf your current Scar 16 meets your needs adequately and you don't require the additional features offered by the upgraded version, it might be more cost-effective to continue using your current system.
That price is ludicrous. I bought the Scar 16 with the 13900HX and 4080 12GB for $2800 last year. Asus wants you to spend literally $1600 more just for a slight upgrade to a 14900K and a minor upgrade to a 4090? No thanks
Quote from: uik on February 11, 2024, 12:37:11Good luck achieving "realistic runtime of 7.5 hours" in any real productivity workloadIt quite literally says "realistic runtimes", not "realistic productivity runtimes". And even then, what is productivity? For someone is typing a lot of text, for someone video editing, for someone else that is coding and compiling... all completely different types of being productive.
Quote from: uik on February 11, 2024, 12:37:11Good luck achieving "realistic runtime of 7.5 hours" in any real productivity workload