The Best Cheap Gaming Laptops for 2023

No laptop is a true gaming machine unless it comes with a dedicated graphics processor (GPU), as opposed to the integrated graphics built into most laptops’ main processor (CPU). For us—and for sellers of laptops—that’s the bright line that divides a gamer from a pretender.

While this is true, Intel’s 11th Generation “Tiger Lake” CPUs changed the calculus on this position somewhat, as they introduced notably improved integrated graphics. These, and the latest processors, can run some “real” games at low settings, as shown in our integrated graphics testing.

Ultimately, though, they too are still well short of the performance of a discrete GPU found in a gaming laptop. The traditional $1,000 mark for budget gaming systems has gotten a bit murkier in 2023, with costs rising, but we’ll run down what to look for, sticking as closely to that figure as possible. Read on for a breakdown of our current best budget gaming laptops, all given PCMag’s thorough testing regimen, followed by a guide to what to look for in the right laptop for you.

The Best Budget Gaming Laptop Deals This Week*

*Deals are selected by our commerce team

Deeper Dive: Our Top Tested Picks

Lenovo Legion 5i Gen 7

Best Entry-Level Gaming Laptop

Bottom Line:

Lenovo’s midpriced Legion 5i Gen 7 gaming laptop has gaming performance and a native screen resolution that exceeds expectations. It’s a good buy that’s almost a must-buy if you can find it at a discount.

PROS

  • An overachiever in gaming and productivity performance
  • Bright, colorful 165Hz screen
  • Ample connectivity

CONS

  • A bit bulky
  • No biometrics
  • No SD or microSD card slot
  • Low-rent webcam and speakers

Read Our Lenovo Legion 5i Gen 7 Review

MSI GL66 Pulse

A Cheaper Alternative to the Lenovo Legion 5i Gen 7

Bottom Line:

MSI’s GL66 Pulse offers a refreshing design and solid gaming frame rates, but it isn’t the best value, missing the mark in several key areas.

PROS

  • Good-looking
  • Solid gaming performance with GeForce RTX 3060
  • Available with two storage drives

CONS

  • Costly considering the feature set
  • Mostly plastic build
  • Runs hot and loud
  • Brief battery life
  • Single-zone RGB keyboard and stiff touchpad

Read Our MSI GL66 Pulse Review

MSI Katana GF66

Best Value for a Gaming Laptop

Bottom Line:

MSI’s Katana GF66 is a well-priced, well-rounded budget gaming laptop that cuts competing models down to size.

PROS

  • Aggressive price for the component mix
  • Solid 1080p gaming performance
  • 144Hz display
  • Roomy 1TB SSD

CONS

  • Display isn’t overly bright or colorful
  • Middling CPU performance
  • Brief battery life

Read Our MSI Katana GF66 Review

Acer Predator Helios 300 (2022)

A Solid Alternative to the MSI Katana GF66

Bottom Line:

Acer’s Predator Helios 300 remains a good value among 15.6-inch gaming notebooks, but doesn’t stand out in a fiercely competitive field.

PROS

  • Solid 1080p gaming with GeForce RTX 3060 GPU
  • Bright, colorful 144Hz display
  • Good array of ports

CONS

  • No SD or microSD card slot
  • No fingerprint reader or IR webcam
  • Wi-Fi 6, not 6E
  • Noisy cooling fans

Read Our Acer Predator Helios 300 (2022) Review

Acer Nitro 5 (2022, 15.6-Inch, 12th Gen Core)

Best Gaming Laptop for the Very Tightest Budgets

Bottom Line:

The latest Acer Nitro 5 doesn’t top any charts, but it hits the performance and feature baseline for mainstream gaming at an appealingly low price.

PROS

  • Low price
  • Steady mainstream gaming performance with 12th Gen CPU and GeForce RTX 3050 Ti
  • 144Hz display
  • Good port selection

CONS

  • Core i5 CPU and 512GB of storage are somewhat limited for gaming
  • Middling build quality
  • Falls short of 60fps in most scenarios

Read Our Acer Nitro 5 (2022, 15.6-Inch, 12th Gen Core) Review

Acer Nitro 5 (2022, 17-Inch)

Best Budget Gaming Laptop With a Giant Screen

Bottom Line:

This 17-inch Acer Nitro 5 model delivers a capable RTX 3060-backed gaming experience, achieving 60fps-plus AAA title performance at what stands for a reasonable price in late 2022.

PROS

  • Capable components for high-refresh-rate gaming
  • 144Hz display and 1TB SSD support the gaming experience
  • Good battery life

CONS

  • Big footprint
  • 6.6-pound weight

Read Our Acer Nitro 5 (2022, 17-Inch) Review

Asus TUF Gaming F17 (2022)

A Solid Alternative to the Acer Nitro 5 (2022, 17-Inch)

Bottom Line:

Its design and battery life won’t win any awards, but the big-screen Asus TUF Gaming F17 delivers a balanced 1080p gaming experience with only a few concessions.

PROS

  • Affordable price
  • Competent mainstream gaming performance
  • Large 144Hz display
  • Good connectivity
  • Upgradable RAM and storage

CONS

  • Previous-generation Intel CPU and 8GB memory limit performance
  • Cheap-feeling plastic design
  • Thick and hefty, with brief battery life

Read Our Asus TUF Gaming F17 (2022) Review

Lenovo Legion 5i Pro Gen 7

Best Budget Gaming Laptop for Raw Performance

Bottom Line:

An upgrade to 12th Generation Intel silicon makes Lenovo’s 16-inch gaming laptop a formidable competitor.

PROS

  • World-class productivity and gaming performance
  • Attractive medium-high-res, medium-fast-refresh 16:10 display
  • Responsive keyboard
  • Plenty of ports

CONS

  • No SD or microSD card slot
  • No biometrics

Read Our Lenovo Legion 5i Pro Gen 7 Review

EVOO LP-7

Best Budget Gaming Laptop From a New Brand

Bottom Line:

EVOO’s unassuming LP-7, a 15.6-inch gaming laptop, delivers eight-core AMD power and ray-traced graphics at a popular price.

PROS

  • Solid 1080p frame rates for PC gamers
  • Reasonably priced for eight-core Ryzen CPU and GeForce RTX GPU
  • Impressive port selection
  • Decent battery life

CONS

  • Ho-hum plastic look and feel
  • Loud fans
  • Screen could be brighter
  • Some keyboard-layout quibbles

Read Our EVOO LP-7 Review

HP Victus 16

Best Gaming Laptop for CPU Power on the Cheap

Bottom Line:

HP’s new Victus 16 is a good budget gaming laptop, but it commits the sin that the best in its class avoid—its cost-cutting design pokes through in several key ways.

PROS

  • Speedy 1080p gaming
  • Attractive 16.1-inch screen
  • Numerous configuration choices

CONS

  • Plastic build with weak screen hinge and chintzy touchpad
  • A pound overweight
  • No Thunderbolt 4 port
  • No Windows Hello biometrics
  • Bizarre undervolting option

Read Our HP Victus 16 Review

Buying Guide: The Best Cheap Gaming Laptops for 2023

So, ready to buy a gaming laptop? We assume you want to do more than play games at low settings—you have a Steam account, and you ache to play some of the latest AAA games in all their glory. That’s where a dedicated graphics processor (GPU) comes in. It’s the starting point for getting serious about gaming on a notebook.

If you’re truly serious and insist on playing all your games at very high detail settings and the highest possible screen resolution (for most laptops, that’s 1,920 by 1,080 pixels, assuming you’re playing on the laptop’s screen and not an external display), you’re just going to have to shell out some bucks, especially if you want that laptop to stay game-viable at those settings for more than a couple of years.

The Lenovo Legion Y530 gaming laptop at an angle


(Credit: Molly Flores)

High-end future-proofing like that demands top-end graphics silicon: Nvidia’s mighty GeForce RTX 3070 and 3080 were the latest and greatest by the end of 2021, and the RTX 3070 Ti and 3080 Ti launched on laptops in early 2022. Getting one of those GPUs still means big spending, though, and at current prices, they are well outside of the budget range, with most models containing them closer to $2,000 than $1,000. You’re more likely to find the newer RTX 3050 family (and the occasional RTX 3060) at this price level—you’ll find more detail on this in the GPU section below.

Take comfort, though, that times have changed. You don’t necessarily need one of the top-line GPUs for solid gaming performance. With scarce compromise, you can enjoy some very respectable gaming at 1080p in machines a notch or two down from the GeForce RTX elite. Pricing fluctuates considerably in 2023, but these machines are available for just under or just above $1,000, depending on the retailer and any sales. Budget-priced gaming laptops are now an established category, not outliers, and have been embraced by the major players. We’ve tested models from Acer, Asus, Dell, HP, Lenovo, and MSI.

Here’s how to make sense of their components—and get the most for your money.


Components in Cheap Gaming Laptops: What to Look For, Part by Part

Our first bit of advice? If gaming’s your primary focus and your budget really does dead-stop at $1,000, get the best GPU you can for the money, and let everything else follow from there. That may be at the expense of another spec or two—a little less storage, say, or a Core i5 processor instead of a Core i7.

The MSI GL66 Pulse gaming laptop in a semi-closed position


(Credit: Molly Flores)

That said, most notebooks aren’t upgradable, apart from their primary system memory (RAM, not to be confused with the graphics memory) and in some cases, the storage. You’re going to be stuck with the screen, the graphics chip, and the processor you buy now, so evaluate these parts wisely. If you can stretch your budget a bit to get the next-tier-higher component, it can pay dividends in terms of usable life.

Which CPU Should You Get in a Cheap Gaming Laptop?

Some of today’s games, especially in the MMORPG and real-time-strategy (RTS) categories, tend to hammer the processor (CPU). Dual-core processors are a thing of the past, for good reason: Some AAA games call explicitly for quad-core CPUs as a minimum.

That said, a maxed-out Core i7 or Core i9 CPU is less crucial for gaming than it is for processor-intensive tasks such as video editing and media-file production work. With the 11th Generation Intel CPUs that dominate budget gaming laptops at the moment (newer laptops will see more 12th Generation chips as the year progresses), you’ll get plenty of pep even from Core i5 CPUs. A Core i7 of the same generation is actually a hefty six-core or eight-core processor that, we’d argue, is overkill for casual gamers who need to mind what they spend. A modern Core i5 chip will more than likely serve you just fine.

A fully open view of the Lenovo Legion 5 Pro gaming laptop


(Credit: Molly Flores)

Intel’s 11th Generation “Tiger Lake” processors took over in 2021 models, with even budget laptops like the MSI Katana GF66 utilizing the very capable H-Series Core i7 chips. The 12th Generation “Alder Lake” mobile processors arrived on more expensive gaming laptops early in 2022 and started to appear in the budget tier midway through the year. This is a similar pattern to what we saw with the Tiger Lake-H processors, which launched in more premium gaming laptops first. For now, plenty of the laptops you see in our recommendations will still use 11th Generation chips (that is, Core i7 processors whose names start with “11”), but newer releases will run on 12th Generation.

Meanwhile, on the AMD side of the fence, things are looking up, big time. Previously, AMD CPUs and GPUs were rarely seen in midrange and high-end laptops, but they were good fits for budget laptops (because the components were generally cheaper value plays, to begin with). Even then, there weren’t too many laptops with AMD chips. That started to change in 2020 across all price tiers with the release of laptop chips based on the company’s Zen 2 microarchitecture. As the Zen 2 processors did on desktops, these Zen 2-based “Renoir” processors challenged Intel on laptops in 2020.

AMD continued to up the ante in 2021 with the launch of the Zen 3-based Ryzen 5000 mobile CPUs. We now see many more laptops with AMD’s Ryzen 5 or 7 CPUs. Ryzen 6000 laptop CPUs have already launched as well, but like Intel’s 12th Generation processors, these arrived first in more expensive laptops, and haven’t hit all that many budget systems just yet.

Both next-generation AMD Ryzen 7000 processors and Intel’s 13th Generation “Raptor Lake” chips have arrived on desktops, and we got our first look at both the Ryzen and Raptor Lake mobile versions at CES 2023. They will be arriving on laptops this year soon, though the higher-end options will likely be more common first before filtering down to the cheaper laptops.

How Much Memory Is Enough for Gaming?

Given an around-$1,000 budget, 8GB is the minimum memory (RAM) you should settle for. (We haven’t seen less than 8GB of RAM in a machine with dedicated graphics for some years now.) Most sub-$1,000 machines with dedicated graphics won’t go any higher, but that’s an adequate amount for most moderate use and mainstream gaming. It used to be that 8GB of RAM was far more common than 16GB, but even in the budget tier these days, you’ll find many of our picks include 16GB.

Whether the laptop’s RAM is user-upgradable later on, and what the ceiling is, are further facets to investigate. That said, even if you can upgrade the memory, the laptop may come with memory modules occupying both slots, which would mean replacing them both when upgrading later. It’s best to get what you need upfront.

How Much Storage Is Enough in a Cheap Gaming Laptop?

Even in the budget tier, most laptops are now using solid-state drives (SSDs) as opposed to hard drives (HDDs) in 2023. The occasional 17.3-inch-screen model might offer a small-capacity SSD boot drive alongside a secondary-storage platter hard drive, but by and large, standalone SSDs now reign supreme. (Note that most budget gaming laptops under a grand will be 15.6-inchers.)

A rear view of the Acer Predator Triton 300 SE gaming laptop


(Credit: Molly Flores)

You can still opt for this dual-drive approach if you can find it and afford it, but it isn’t the norm any longer. If you can, the smaller, faster SSD would be home to the operating system and a few favorite games, and the larger, more economical hard drive would host the rest of your games and other programs that don’t need quick loading times. (It’s possible to split your Steam and other game libraries across drives.) Some larger-body budget gaming laptops let you add the second drive yourself inside an empty 2.5-inch bay inside. That can be the most economical choice, as 2.5-inch hard drives of significant capacity can be had for well less than $100.

In a gaming laptop, an SSD plus a hard drive is the best of both storage worlds. This is especially recommended given how large modern game installations have become, ballooning over 100GB at times. Your small SSD will fill up quickly, so 512GB is the minimum you should aim for in a gaming laptop.

In terms of gaming performance, the storage subsystem affects game load times and in-game level changes. It can be of special importance in open-world games, where huge environments are loaded in real-time. Thus, having at least some fast, SSD-based storage is desirable. To our eyes, you should only opt for an SSD boot drive at this point. The difference in performance “feel” between a hard drive and an SSD boot drive is too big to ignore. (See our picks for the fastest SSDs.)

Optical drives are just about extinct on gaming models at any screen size these days. Even if you have lots of games on disc, know that you can always use an external USB DVD/CD drive in a pinch, and they cost just $20 or so.

What Kind of Display to Get in a Cheap Gaming Laptop?

You should keep four specs in mind when looking at a given gaming laptop’s display panel: the screen size, the native resolution, the refresh rate, and the panel type.

As we noted earlier, 15.6 inches is the general screen-size rule for most gaming laptops that cost around $1,000. This size is a good compromise in ways that extend beyond cost. Sometimes, gaming on the biggest laptop screen possible—there is a spread of 16- and 17-inch machines these days—is the way to go. They aren’t as portable, though (many of these notebooks weigh six pounds or more), and the lightest ones tend to be far from the cheapest.

A fully opened view of the Acer Nitro 5 (2021, 15-inch) gaming laptop


(Credit: Molly Flores)

A 15-inch gamer still won’t be an ideal daily traveler, but most are a lot more manageable than their larger kin. Also, today’s 15-inch gaming rigs are better suited for use in true mobile fashion—that is, off an AC power plug—than those of past years. We’ve seen a few hit six or more hours of battery life, albeit in everyday productivity use or playing back video; gaming will trim that number considerably. (See our picks for the laptops with the best battery life.)

As for the screen’s native resolution, 1,920 by 1,080 pixels (commonly called 1080p) is the norm in budget-priced and mainstream gaming machines. The more pixels you need to push, the more graphics power you need, and a savvy maker of gaming laptops won’t outfit a laptop with a screen whose native resolution the GPU can’t do justice. So the scarcity of higher-than-HD screens in budget gaming machines is no accident. Not only do such screens cost more and sap more battery life, but the graphics chips found in under-$1,000 gaming rigs wouldn’t power gameplay on them very well. (Screens with resolutions much higher than 1080p tend to look small and squinty at the 15-inch size, anyway.)

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Display Details: Refresh Rate and Panel Type

Like the native resolution, you should take note of the panel’s refresh rate, even if, these days, it may be the same—that is, 60Hz—across some older budget models.

If the refresh rate (which is measured in hertz, or Hz) is being called out as a feature on a given laptop, that means it’s likely higher than the baseline 60Hz. Most laptop screens, including those in most non-gaming-oriented budget models, stick to 60Hz, which means they redraw the onscreen image 60 times per second and thus can display up to 60 frames per second (fps) of in-game performance. (In other words, if your graphics chip can produce 90fps in a given game, you’ll see only 60 of them.)

Most gaming notebook screens these days, though, can display at 120Hz or more. This feature originally arrived only in costly gaming laptops, but by now, it’s even expected in budget gaming machines. The majority of our picks offer at least 120Hz, and many go to 144Hz or beyond. These high refresh rates can be beneficial for some extremely fast-paced games, particularly titles played competitively online, including stalwarts such as CS:GO, DOTA 2, and Overwatch, as well as Fortnite, Apex Legends, and Call of Duty: Warzone.

An open view of the HP Victus 16 gaming laptop


(Credit: Molly Flores)

Still, unless you’re attempting to become a professional gamer or get ranked globally in a particular popular title, a fast screen isn’t strictly necessary. Plenty of gamers are still “stuck” with 60Hz displays, after all, if they haven’t bought a new PC in the last few years, or if they’re playing on a non-gaming laptop. Still, with high-refresh panels becoming the norm even in budget gaming machines, the lack of one now indicates an older model you probably want to avoid.

Another spec to watch for is panel type. You’ll want to go for an in-plane switching (IPS) panel if possible, as they generally offer the best off-center viewing angles and colors. Some gamers are content with cheaper twisted nematic (TN) panels, which make you settle for narrower viewing angles—but then, you’re probably seated directly in front of the screen, so that’s not an issue. TN panels can offer slightly faster response times.

A final note about touch input. Despite the undeniable convenience of touch screens for Windows, they are not the norm on gaming machines, and we don’t know of any GeForce- or Radeon RX-based gaming models in the under-$1,000 zone with touch. (See our picks for the best touch-screen laptops.)

What Is the Right GPU to Get in a Cheap Gaming Laptop?

The dedicated graphics chip is the backbone of any gaming computer. In budget gaming machines, Nvidia’s GeForce GTX line dominates the market, though entry-level RTX GPUs are becoming more common.

In the last few years, the company’s GeForce GTX 1600 series, or “Turing” family, were the most common in the least expensive gaming laptops. This first included GPUs like the GeForce GTX 1650 and GTX 1660 Ti in 2019, which were joined in 2020 by the GeForce GTX 1650 Ti, fitting in between those two. However, due to some changes and new additions to Nvidia’s stack, GTX at this price is now fading away.

A fully opened view of the MSI Katana GF66 gaming laptop


(Credit: Molly Flores)

Nvidia has since introduced the RTX 3050 and 3050 Ti, bringing its previously higher-end RTX line into the budget tier. RTX 3060-based laptops have also fallen a bit in price since the launch of that GPU. This means gaming at high settings (or even maximum, depending on the game) on an entry-level laptop is more attainable than ever. GTX GPUs have been supplanted by RTX ones in new machines now, with the lower-end RTX GPUs filling in the most affordable options. It’s no coincidence that budget gaming laptop costs have risen too, though.

As such, you should expect to see mostly RTX 3050 or 3050 Ti GPUs in this price range, and even some RTX 3060 models. Despite initial guidance that RTX 3060 models would be available for less than $1,000, current prices have raised most of them above that mark. That said, hunt around for a good enough deal or sale, and it’s possible to find an RTX 3060 for under a grand now and then.

So, what can you expect from these GPUs? The GTX 1650 Ti will boost you more comfortably over 30fps (and maybe to 60fps depending on the game) than the GTX 1650, while the GTX 1660 Ti is a genuine 60fps performer. You’ll find those in older laptops from $600 to $1,000 depending on which other components they’re paired with.

For what it’s worth, the older GTX 1060 is still listed as the baseline for using your laptop with a virtual reality (VR) headset. (See our picks for the best laptops for VR.) But know that the GTX 1660 Ti is the newer equivalent in that regard, and it will only give you better performance.

The RTX 3050 Ti comes much closer to 60fps gaming on average. It will struggle to meet that mark in the most high-fidelity games, at least on higher settings, but can achieve this if you’re willing to lower some visual settings. In less demanding competitive multiplayer titles, like Rainbow Six Siege, the RTX 3050 Ti can reach frame rates into the hundreds. Laptops with this GPU can occasionally cost under $1,000, but can easily go up to $1,200.

A lid view of the Acer Predator Helios 300 gaming laptop


(Credit: Molly Flores)

If you can find an RTX 3060-based budget laptop in this range, know that it’s a marked step above the others. This GPU cruises over 60fps in most games, and can meet that mark even in demanding AAA games. Most of the time, it won’t even require you to lower settings, though the most straining titles may need some compromise. If you can find a laptop with this GPU for a similar price to others, it’s worth making it the priority in your decision.

Additionally, as far as GTX vs RTX goes, ray tracing is an advanced lighting technique that only GPUs with the RTX moniker carry the hardware to pull off. The GPUs at the top of the hierarchy (the RTX 3070 and RTX 3080, for example) are superior for performing this technique, as it will drag down your frame rates, but any RTX machine is technically capable. This is especially true with DLSS 2.0, an Nvidia visual feature that helps relieve the graphics burden at higher resolutions. Being able to pull this off on budget laptops at all is an impressive feat, and shows how this category is healthier than ever in terms of performance.

Naturally, the performance potential of the full-size 30 Series desktop cards is such that the mobile versions can’t hope to keep up given the space and thermal discrepancies. Additionally, manufacturers are outfitting the 30 Series laptop GPUs in a variety of wattages to fit their design and thermal needs, often resulting in differing real-world performance from a given GPU.

A side view of the EVOO LP-7 gaming laptop


(Credit: Molly Flores)

This can even apply to the same GPU in two different laptops; one may push the power ceiling because the laptop is larger, while another may limit its performance to fit in a smaller chassis. You can read about these complicated performance nuances if you want to learn more, but know that looking at individual performance testing for laptops is more important than ever.

Nvidia recently also announced the laptop versions of the GeForce RTX 40 Series desktop GPUs at CES 2023, but they are starting on the high-end, expensive part of the stack, so it’s of no concern to budget laptops at this time. Less powerful GPUs in the RTX 40 Series will be announced eventually, and the mobile versions will likely trickle out even later.

As for Nvidia’s competitor AMD, its dedicated graphics chips are less common in budget gaming laptops (or higher-cost ones, for that matter), even as its Ryzen processor success rises against Intel. Some laptops do offer AMD CPUs paired with Nvidia GPUs, and you’ll occasionally find a few among our picks. The most recent Radeon RX 6000M Series GPUs are solid, but the few laptops these have shown up in have been more premium offerings. Like Nvidia, AMD announced its newest mobile GPUs, the Radeon RX 7000 Series at CES 2023, but we haven’t tested any samples of them yet.

Don’t Forget the Keyboard: Lighting and Layouts

One of the typical features that sets apart a gaming laptop is a colorful, backlit keyboard. These vary quite a bit from model to model, with more elaborate backlighting going hand-in-hand with higher prices and a higher general level of other components.

Almost all budget gaming laptops will employ single-color backlighting (most often, red or white) to keep costs down. The next step up is lighting programmable by zone, with three or four blocks of the keyboard independently customizable in different colors, but this is not common in budget machines. Keyboards with per-key, individually programmable lighting are the province of high-end machines only.

A view of the MSI GL66 Pulse gaming laptop's keyboard


(Credit: Molly Flores)

Also, look at the key layout. Models with an isolated cluster of arrow keys or well-defined WASD keys get bonus points, in our book. Also, because most budget gaming laptops are 15.6-inch models, check for a dedicated number pad to the right of the main key area, if you prefer to have one—or not, for that matter. Some machines of this screen size will have one, some won’t. (A 17-inch laptop almost invariably will, however.)


So, What Is the Best Cheap Gaming Laptop to Buy?

At the top of this article and below, we’ve mapped out our top-rated models to investigate. As mentioned, some of the configurations sent to us for testing were above $1,000; this is virtually unavoidable given the market in 2023. Some remain under that mark, while others raise and fall below that line depending on availability, deals, and generally fluctuating costs.

Also, note that most of these models are a single version of a machine in a varied line. So use the linked reviews as guidelines, not absolutes, when assessing each laptop family. You may not get quite the level of performance we did if key components were downgraded to get the price below $1,000. But you should get a solid idea of the various laptops’ screens, build, and input quality from our reviews.

In addition to poring over our reviews and checking out the vendors’ sites, using the price filters at a reseller like Newegg.com can help you see different configurations at different price points. Some manufacturers offer lots of differently weighted versions of the same laptop (say, more storage in one config, a better GPU in another). Playing with the filters on these sites can be an illuminating exercise in give-and-take.

Want to round out your PC gaming experience? Also check out our picks for the best gaming mice and top gaming headsets, as well as our picks for the best gaming laptops overall, price aside.

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