Hi,
My 5-year-old laptop (specs in sig) died recently and I've been considering replacing it. I have a desktop so it's more of a want than a need, but I would like a new one; I just don't know when we'll replace it (hoping within the next few months, maybe take advantage of holiday sales).
That being said, my budget is about $800 give or take $100, but could maybe be talked into going up a little more (I don't know if I can get away with more than $1000). My understanding is that puts me at the GTX 960M being my best option. I had been looking at the HP Pavilion (17.3" version, as that's the size I want) because with coupons it is good specs for the price. However I was made aware of the new Pascal coming out and was advised that waiting might be better.
I want to preface this by saying that other than the little research I have done today/yesterday I have little knowledge/experience about the performance and price trends of GPUs, so please forgive my ignorance.
So my questions are: How do you think the release of the Pascal line would affect my GPU choices? Clearly a 1060M would be better than the 960M, but how will it compare in price? Will it be within my budget? Will it bring other currently more powerful out-of-budget cards like the 970M into my budget range? If I was hoping to buy a laptop by the end of this year or so would these card availability/prices have taken effect yet, or will I have to wait longer?
On a side note, I considered upgrading the i5 to i7 and FHD to UHD for about $150 more (with coupons). In your opinion is that worth it, or not really? I tend to play older games, but also like to play some new games as well, like Starcraft 2, Civ V, Heroes of the Storm, and Star Wars Battlefront. I consider myself a casual/moderate gamer.
Thanks.
-
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
-
We're less than two weeks away from the announcement of mobile Pascal GPU's. You should just wait until mid-August. It'll be worth it.
Should be available for purchase by the end of August or early September.Cakefish, i_pk_pjers_i, Ionising_Radiation and 1 other person like this. -
We don't know, it may be a desktop 1060 instead of a 1060m (fairly likely) but that could drive the cost up. So no one can tell you yet.
-
pascal will most likely not change anything for your budget, since the upcoming 1060 mobile is actually a 970M successor (thus prices will be accordingly higher than for a 960M successor). lower-tier pascal mobile gpus will take quite a while to be released, according to @Prema
i_pk_pjers_i and TomJGX like this. -
i_pk_pjers_i and jaybee83 like this.
-
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
-
Depends on how long you can wait, as any of the new cards won't be available before September (they'll just get announced in early-mid August). Eventually, sure, the price for 'outdated' tech comes down really quickly.
-
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
I don't know for sure when we're buying, but my current guess is going to be late Fall (like November/December-ish). Can we expect some price drops by then?
-
960m can be found anywhere from 700 to 1000dlrs machines. 970m can be found at 1kdlrs.
960m is very underpowered compared to any of the upper released models. A mid range pascal of the same TDP might offer a healthy 70% boost. Forget names because it may not be called 1060 at all for mobile.
you can probably expect something between 970m and 980m for the successor of 960m, provided nvidia is not overly greedy and releases an underpowered mobile variant. -
You could also buy a used notebook from someone who's upgrading to Pascal, I'm sure once the new gen is released many people will sell their "old" machines (that are still pretty new). Check out the NBR Marketplace sometimes. I bought a used K5000M there recently (as my 680M died), which will hopefully last until I upgrade myself. -
You should wait and get a new pascal laptop but if the price for the laptop is out level your budget then get a maxwell laptop is not too bad.
-
I would wait if you're on a limited budget.
However, I picked up the laptop in my SIG for $999 (plus tax) at my local Micro Center just a couple weeks ago. It's a great laptop that would last you at least a couple of years at 1080p gaming with decent settings and maybe another year with reduced settings. I would imagine even GTX 1060/70 laptops that release in the near future will be more than your budget allows. I'm planning to wait and see prices of Pascal laptops as well as performance differences before I decide to sell this new one and grab a Pascal laptop. My main motivation was something that can play BF1 at 1080p medium and the 960m I had previously was just not going to cut it.
I figure I'll go ahead and link you a few laptops that are serioulsy great deals at the moment and the one I purchased.
http://www.microcenter.com/product/466732/ROG_G751JT-WH71(WX)_173_Gaming_Laptop_Computer_-_Black -- Still a great processor and a 970m, IPS display and G-Sync for $999! If I didn't mind carrying this laptop around I would have purchased this. G-Sync is amazing.
http://www.microcenter.com/product/...4_156_Gaming_Laptop_Computer_-_Aluminum_Black --The one I purchased for $999. Good Skylake quad core CPU that hasn't held me back at all. 970m again, GREAT IPS display, although not G-Sync like the above laptop. I also upgraded the RAM and WiFi. -
1070 = 980M replacement
1060 = 970M replacement
1050 = 960M replacementjaybee83 and i_pk_pjers_i like this. -
Ionising_Radiation ?v = ve*ln(m0/m1)
Yes, wait for the new Pascal notebooks. They are rumoured to display massive performance increase over their Maxwell counterparts.
-
Sent from my Huawei Mate 8 NXT-AL10Ionising_Radiation likes this. -
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
It sounds like waiting is certainly a good idea. I just hope "waiting" means 2-3 months, not 6-8 months.TomJGX likes this. -
-
-
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
As for my current laptop, it's... it's.... it's DEADWell, I bought it nearly 5 years ago to the day, and it died just under 3 weeks ago, so it lasted a little more than 4 years and 11 months, which is pretty good. It was starting to get obsolete and unable to handle the newer games.
-
Your budget may put you in the range of a used or manufacturer refurbished 1060M laptop (from eBay or something), if you need one now, now, now. You could also save up for another month or two and buy a new one. You're literally $200-$300 away from 1060M laptop range. The cheapest 1060M laptop should be around $1100-$1199.
Prices will decrease significantly after a few months of being out, especially before the holiday season.TomJGX likes this. -
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
-
-
Last edited: Jul 25, 2016
-
Watch for sales, sales are everywhere...
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HP dv7t 6100-CTO | 2nd gen. Intel i5-2410M (2.3 Ghz) | 17.3" FHD Anti-glare LED 1920x1080 display | 6GB DDR3 RAM | 500GB HDD (7200 rpm) | 1GB Radeon HD 6770M GDDR5 | Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit -
-
Some laptops will be outfitted with the desktop variants, and some not.
-
Ionising_Radiation ?v = ve*ln(m0/m1)
Just nVidia making things more complicated for notebook buyers.
TomJGX likes this. -
I'm exactly put at the same situation as yours.
I own a 2011 Acer Aspire 5750 multimedia laptop (back then). It lasted 5 years and 2 months and it is still working, although extremely obsolete for even opening multiple tabs in Chrome.
Right now I have a budget of 1000-1100$-ish. I'm not sure whether I should buy a fully equipped laptop from MSI (the GE62 with the i7 6700HQ, GTX960M, 16GB of DDR4 and an HDD+SSD sounds like a great pick) or just wait more for the release of Pascal GPUs. The unfortunate thing about me is the fact I move a lot, so no Desktop around to depend on.
If anyone can advise me on whether I should wait, while increasing my budget and going for a 6th year with this junk, or just spend my cash for a properly fast laptop for daily tasks and light gaming, I would highly appreciate it. Thank you! -
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
I'll let the experts here give you more information, though, as they are sure to have a heck of a lot better insight than I would on the availability/pricing of the new Pascal laptops. -
I went through this entire thread and the answers were not quite "that satisfying" for me to make a decision. The prices of the laptops with the Pascal GPUs are still unknown (although the very first 1080M laptop is already out for pre-order, but it costs 2500$), and the release date of the mid-tier mobile Pascal GPUs is unknown too (Usually, the X50 and X60 make it to the market few months after their high end variants). I'm not even quite sure if this laptop can last few more months, it might even die on me while I'm waiting. And that would be really troublesome!
I decided I'll stick around until August 15th (MSI will reveal their "Next gen Notebooks"). If the release dates are still too much for this laptop to handle, I think I'll just go with the 960M. -
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
-
-
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
-
-
You'll be okay with the 960m. You won't be able to play everything with max settinha though.
-
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
On the other hand, if December comes around and the cheapest Pascal laptops are still $1200 or more even with sales/coupons (which I'm huge on), then I will probably regret not buying a 960M now. -
-
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
Black Friday is certainly what I have in mind for a purchasing time. My brother-in-law says that the really good deals go very fast, though. On the other hand, that whole time is generally filled with sales/coupons; Black Friday is trending from becoming a single day to more of a season, at least online.
That's when I'm hoping to buy and I hope they are out by then. -
http://www.notebookcheck.net/Computer-Games-on-Laptop-Graphic-Cards.13849.0.html -
760m still plays games..heck so does 660m what's wrong with 960m
-
-
I don't know.. no one really does...I just about bought that small clevo with 860m.. now I'd guess it will be good for 2 more years...3 might be pushing it.. but in general mid range cards last 3 years. High end 4 years then resolution must be lowered
-
Sorry to double post but just look at the 6990m or 0ther cards 4 years ago and see if they run new games by checking YouTube
-
Depends on games you play. I only "just" bought laptops for my boys with 960m. I'm expecting it to last 3-4 years. Previously one had 650m and other some AMD GPU. Was getting more annoying for me to fix their problems than just buy them a new laptop.
Except for a handful of demanding AAA games at 1080p it should manage just fine.
Prototime, Ionising_Radiation, i_pk_pjers_i and 1 other person like this. -
Sounds like you'll be waiting for 1050
Sent from a 128th Legion Stormtrooper 6POne of the good guys and TomJGX like this. -
Maybe you could grab a 980M now? Still able to run most title @ 1080p with decent fps depending on settings and optimization. The 980M is between the desktop 960 and 970, that's still some considerable performance. Unless you want to go for the absolute best I don't see any reason to rule out a 980M now, those Pascal machines are currently overpriced anyway
-
killkenny1, Prototime and One of the good guys like this.
-
and there's always the option for refurbished laptops taking tight budget into consideration -
While Maxwell machines will definitely drop in price, some laptops with the flagship maxwell 980M featuring an MXM slot won't drop, simply because they offer a feature barely existent in Pascal laptops.
But the point I'm wanting to make here is: As long as newer technologies and hardware generations exist, the latest tech will always provide a better performance/$. Simply put, you'll expect a new "performance norm" for a said price. At the moment, GTX 1060 laptops start from 1200$ all the way to 2000$ (depending on extras and features used), while you'll still find laptops with the 980M costing 2000 to 2500$, again depending on the features. GTX1060 however is 20-25% better. This shows how better performance can cost cheaper provided you are swapping to a new generation of GPUs. (The same will apply to Kaby Lake vs Skylake)One of the good guys likes this. -
One of the good guys Notebook Consultant
It makes sense for older technology to drop to make it compete with the new, but that doesn't seem to be the case as much as we'd think.TomJGX and SkidrowSKT like this.
Current budget has me at 960M now, how will Pascal change that?
Discussion in 'Gaming (Software and Graphics Cards)' started by One of the good guys, Jul 20, 2016.