Maybe you have noticed three disadvantages of the Asus G551 JK: the screen, the portability, and the battery life. The screen is a TN panel, which is inferior to technologies like IPS panels. The result is that the screen has poor colour reproduction and atrocious viewing angles. Tilt it just a little behind or ahead and the colours will change dramatically. At Rs. 82,000, that’s just unacceptable in a gaming laptop, where you are paying for premium graphics hardware so that things look good.
The laptop is also quite heavy, which compromises its portability. You need to treat this more as a desktop replacement, with only occasional use of actually moving it to different locations—and hardly ever gaming on the go.
Finally, the battery is poor and drains quickly, especially while playing games. It ran out of juice within 1.5 hours of playing Borderlands 2, and within 2 hours of playing Burnout Paradise. So again, you’ll need to keep it connected to an electrical socket. Not much in terms of portability here.
So what do you say? Of cource every coin have two side, here comes your brighter side of ASUS G551 ROG:
With most games, you can expect a smooth experience. The level of detail is the issue here. Can you play Borderlands 2 and FarCry 4? Sure. But not at 60 frames per second with all the settings clocked to as high as they can go. You’ll have to fiddle around with the settings in a lot of games, but the good news is that you’ll never have to bring them down to the default “medium” profiles. Yay!
Thanks for sharing!!! Now I learned something.
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