Laptop Gamer, should I wait for Pascal?

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tverma

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Nov 13, 2012
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Hey Guys,
I am in the market for a gaming laptop. My budget is a $1000 or less. I know this more or less restricts me to GTX960m. I understand that the 960m is just a Nvidia overclock of the 860m with extremely minute differences. I would certainly like more bang for my buck but I have already been playing games at what people consider unplayable.
My current laptop's specs are:
HP dm4-Pavilion 2191-us
Intel Core-i5 2430m with Intel HD 3000
4gb RAM
I have toughed it out with this laptop for 4 years and its still serving me well for my non-gaming needs. I actually played AC: Black Flag @10-14 fps. You do what you have to do with what you have, I know. But now, I have literally reached a wall gaming-wise. I am unable to play any new games unless its like minus 10fps which is like my threshold for unplayable. I play BF3 @ low settings and manage 15-20 fps after I reduce my res all the way to 600X400. So yes, I need a new computer. I am severely annoyed by NVIDIAs oversight with the GTX 960m and I'm not going to be buying another system for 4-5 years. And with directx12, Nvidia actually performs poorer than AMD in dx12. Yes Nvidia had the upperhand dx11 but things have changed. I would like the maximum bang for my buck and people always come up with "you'll keep waiting forever" because the new best thing is right around the corner, etc. So, I just wanted advice I guess. Should I wait? I know a lot of new things came out like Skylake, DDR4, TB3 (The idea of external gpus is like my favorite thing about it), etc. So feel free to weigh in people... all advice welcome! Thanks
 
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I would suggest waiting, but it could be Q3 2016. If in a move to maximize profit Nvidia only improves the performance by 10-15% than the rest of the benefits from the double node shrink will come in efficiency. 28nm to 16FF allows for around 70% less power use. In a desktop this matters less to gamers but in a laptop it means running a lot cooler. This will allow for quieter, thinner, lighter and cooler laptops. Nvidia is pushing more power in laptops; they recently announced support for full desktop 980gtx in laptops. If they push mobile performance and match the 980gtx desktop with a 16nmFF Pascal which draws much less power then you will have some great graphics power that runs cooler than today's mobile cards. Pascal will...

For example, lets say the GTX 980 has 8 billion transistors (I don't know if that is the case), Pascal is supposed to have around 17 billion transistors at the highest end. So, will this result in a direct performance improvement?
 
There will be improvement for sure but it won't translate in linear way. Means if for example pascal having 16billion transistor it might not double the performance. Maxwell gaining massive performance increase in games vs Kepler despite built on the same node because nvidia throw away compute stuff from maxwell so they can contribute those transistor count towards gaming performance. AMD did the same with Fiji or else Fiji will not be possible with current 28nm node. With Pascal nvidia was supposed to bring in those compute stuff back. So it is possible nvidia was hoping to gain more performance from node shrink itself. It will be interesting to see if nvidia can overcome this problem or not.
 

So how much of a gaming performance increase should we expect? 10%,20%, 30% if we are lucky?
 

So this brings me back to my original is it wroth it to wait? :)
 
My best suggestion with all tech things is, if you can wait then wait. Tech will always improve in terms of performance and efficiency. I am still waiting for the perfect laptop for me as my gaming needs are very specific. Also for $1000, laptops are not the best for gaming due to heat. This will limit the time it lasts. But I don't know how well the cooling will improve by then.
 
Yeah...well considering I'm running Intel HD 3000, I was unable to play any good game so I found this great deal and just decided to run with it. You wouldn't find a gaming laptop for that price. For $999:Aspire V15 Nitro Black Edition VN7-592G-70EN 15.6" Gaming Laptop Computer; Intel Core i7-6700HQ Processor 2.6GHz; Microsoft Windows 10; 16GB DDR4 RAM; 1TB 5,400RPM Hard Drive; 128GB Solid State Drive; NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960M 4GB GDDR5; Secure Digital Card Reader; 10/100/1000 Network; 802.11ac Wireless; Bluetooth 4.0; 15.6" Full HD Widescreen LED-backlit IPS Display. I'd imagine this is a good deal right? I did find a laptop with 970m for 999 but its processor was 5700, it was only 8Gb ddr3, no solid state, only one fan cooling, etc. This laptop that I bought is also meant for school so I feel like I got a great deal but opinions?
 
I would suggest waiting, but it could be Q3 2016. If in a move to maximize profit Nvidia only improves the performance by 10-15% than the rest of the benefits from the double node shrink will come in efficiency. 28nm to 16FF allows for around 70% less power use. In a desktop this matters less to gamers but in a laptop it means running a lot cooler. This will allow for quieter, thinner, lighter and cooler laptops. Nvidia is pushing more power in laptops; they recently announced support for full desktop 980gtx in laptops. If they push mobile performance and match the 980gtx desktop with a 16nmFF Pascal which draws much less power then you will have some great graphics power that runs cooler than today's mobile cards. Pascal will either give quite a bit more graphics power or be much more efficient. Win/Win if you don't mind waiting.
 
Solution


Yeah. I decided to buy a GTX 960m 4gbvram, i7-6700hq, 16gb ddr4, 128 ssd, 1TB acer aspire pro for $999. 'Twas a good deal so yeah plus I have TB3 on that laptop so external graphics are in my future 😉
 


Isn't 970m worth a lot more than 960m ? I mean performance wise 960m might die much sooner than the 970m, with 970m you might last one more year of decent gaming, at the same price ram and cpu architecture isn't as important for a gamer as a 50% performance increase in my opinion.
 
Isn't 970m worth a lot more than 960m ? I mean performance wise 960m might die much sooner than the 970m, with 970m you might last one more year of decent gaming, at the same price ram and cpu architecture isn't as important for a gamer as a 50% performance increase in my opinion.[/quotemsg]

970m is definitely better than the 960m. However what you have to take into account is the amount of money youll end up paying for it. Getting to a 970m, you have to shell out an additional 400-500 dollars. That to me seems like a pointless purchase. For example on everything ultra totally maxed out, I get ~30fps on fallout 4. That to me shows that this gpu has plenty of life as I don't mind turning it down to medium as the years pass.
 

This is Nvidia milking the market. Pascal will be delayed definitely
 


 
Asus G751JL 17.3 inch Notebook (Intel Core i7-4750HQ 2 GHz, 16 GB RAM, 1 TB HDD Plus 128 GB SSD, Windows 8.1) was for sale on Amazon for £999 , not sure what it would be in the states , got a 3DMark11 of 10500 , and with Gsync screen Assassins Creed Syndicate was silky smooth. Will probably be waiting a year until the gtx 1070m comes out, so if you can get a gtx 970m for $1000 i would get one as will run all current games smoothly.
 
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