When it comes to gaming laptops, desktop performance has always been
the measuring stick to which gamers hope mobile gaming will finally
reach. Now with this year's crop of gaming laptops, we've seen greater
mobile computing performance is finally obtainable thanks to the
introduction of desktop parts working in tandem with laptop components.
Two machines that best represent this are the Origin EON15-X and MSI GS30 Shadow
with GamingDock. The former comes equipped with a desktop processor
packed into a 1.5-inch chassis. Meanwhile, the MSI GS30 links up with a
desktop GPU box via a port at the back of the notebook.
The two
are similar in that they utilize desktop components to achieve a higher
level of performance beyond even the most decked-out mobile gaming rig.
However, with Intel's Broadwell CPU and Nvidia's Maxwell GPU raising the
bar for notebook performance,, is the desktop still really that much
farther ahead than laptop components?
We're going to examine just
how much more power you get out of desktop components over their mobile
equivalents and determine which are truly the best for gaming. Inside the MSI GamingDock
CPU or GPU
For
starters, this isn't a race that will end with one prize pony coming in
first. It's a bit more complicated because the processor and graphics
card are used to perform completely different but connected processes.
The
CPU is in charge of basic computing tasks, like running your basic PC
environment for email and file management. While gaming, the processor
also serves a larger role in running all the calculations needed for a
game to run from player movement to the physics of every virtual detail.
For
role playing games, the CPU is also extremely important to power all
the in-game artificial intelligence for non-playable characters. What's
more, real-time strategy games require significant computing power to
churn through tons of equations including rule sets, the movement path
of units and the calculations of AI-driven decisions.
The
graphics card meanwhile is tasked with generating visuals and draws the
scene in games. This includes loading and rendering textures, which it
then processes into one seamless picture. While this might sound like
slightly less taxing work, the GPU is equipped with thousands of small
cores designed to handle multiple tasks simultaneously. Desktop CPU tucked in the Origin EON15-XWhile
the CPU and GPU components handle different tasks, neither can stand
without the other. The CPU creates the underlying framework of a game
and tells the GPU what it needs to render in order to create a visual
world since it's not designed to do it on it own.
When it comes to gaming laptops, desktop performance has always been
the measuring stick to which gamers hope mobile gaming will finally
reach. Now with this year's crop of gaming laptops, we've seen greater
mobile computing performance is finally obtainable thanks to the
introduction of desktop parts working in tandem with laptop components.
Two machines that best represent this are the Origin EON15-X and MSI GS30 Shadow
with GamingDock. The former comes equipped with a desktop processor
packed into a 1.5-inch chassis. Meanwhile, the MSI GS30 links up with a
desktop GPU box via a port at the back of the notebook.
The two
are similar in that they utilize desktop components to achieve a higher
level of performance beyond even the most decked-out mobile gaming rig.
However, with Intel's Broadwell CPU and Nvidia's Maxwell GPU raising the
bar for notebook performance,, is the desktop still really that much
farther ahead than laptop components?
We're going to examine just
how much more power you get out of desktop components over their mobile
equivalents and determine which are truly the best for gaming. Inside the MSI GamingDock
CPU or GPU
For
starters, this isn't a race that will end with one prize pony coming in
first. It's a bit more complicated because the processor and graphics
card are used to perform completely different but connected processes.
The
CPU is in charge of basic computing tasks, like running your basic PC
environment for email and file management. While gaming, the processor
also serves a larger role in running all the calculations needed for a
game to run from player movement to the physics of every virtual detail.
For
role playing games, the CPU is also extremely important to power all
the in-game artificial intelligence for non-playable characters. What's
more, real-time strategy games require significant computing power to
churn through tons of equations including rule sets, the movement path
of units and the calculations of AI-driven decisions.
The
graphics card meanwhile is tasked with generating visuals and draws the
scene in games. This includes loading and rendering textures, which it
then processes into one seamless picture. While this might sound like
slightly less taxing work, the GPU is equipped with thousands of small
cores designed to handle multiple tasks simultaneously. Desktop CPU tucked in the Origin EON15-XWhile
the CPU and GPU components handle different tasks, neither can stand
without the other. The CPU creates the underlying framework of a game
and tells the GPU what it needs to render in order to create a visual
world since it's not designed to do it on it own.