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ASUS ROG G750 Gaming Laptop

3DMark 2013

The latest edition of 3DMark approaches benchmarking in a different way from previous editions. Now, instead of focusing on only the latest and greatest feature set, a full benchmark suite is run for the DirectX9, DirectX10 and DirectX11 feature sets. Additionally, reference points are provided for the DX11 benchmark, so you can see how your system compares without having to dig for leaderboards.

3dmark-2013-ice-storm_0

The Ice Storm benchmark tests DX9 performance, and is the least visually impressive of the three. As you might expect, it proved no challenge for the G750.

3dmark-2013-cloud-gate

The Cloud Gate benchmark tests DX10 performance,

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3dmark-2013-comparison

 

Sandra

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sandra-gp-gpu_cpu_apu-cryptography
sandra-gp-gpu_cpu_apu-financial-analysis
sandra-gp-gpu_cpu_apu-memory-latency
sandra-gp-gpu_cpu_apu-processing
 

 

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9 Comments... What's your say?

  1. The G750 uses a soldered CPU! You can’t upgrade it down the road to an extreme CPU when they get cheaper. It’s a stupid move from Asus IMO. That laptop is already one of the heaviest, largest single GPU laptops out there, yet their competitors can make a lighter weight laptop with the same specs with an upgradeable socketed CPU!
    It’s worse yet that they haven’t addressed why they went with the soldered 4700HQ processor versus the 4700MQ.

    • danwat1234

      Stop banging on about soldered processors. They are all going this way now. If you want a PC that you can upgrade the cpu, BUY A DESKTOP!!

      btw I have noticed that nearly all sites that are reviewing the G750, you have cut/pasted the same comments in, do you work for Alienware by chance?

      • Nope I don’t. The G750 is very different from the G50VT that I have and it isn’t a good setup. Having to take apart the laptop to access the other RAM slot and the soldered CPU issue. Their laptop is very thick and heavy, yet a soldered CPU is supposedly to keep thickness down. Doesn’t add up

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