Alienware talked up the inclusion
of Nvidia’s GeForce GPUs in the press release for its new gaming
laptops, but the Alienware 15 and Alienware 17 offer a hardware option
that’s even more surprising and noteworthy: the first-ever appearance of
AMD’s Radeon RX 470 in a laptop.
And not some hobbled, cut-down mobile variant either. Much like Nvidia’s GTX 10-series laptop chips, the Radeon RX 470 found inside the new Alienware laptops is the full-powered desktop version, AMD says.
The inclusion’s an eye-opener for a
few reasons. First, AMD has only discussed the Radeon RX 460’s mobile
variant when it comes to laptops—slapping a full-fat RX 470 into a
gaming rig has never even been mentioned in passing.
Second, while AMD’s Polaris chips still aren’t quite as
power-efficient as Nvidia’s Pascal GPUs, this shows just how far Team
Red’s new graphics architecture has come. There’s no way you’d be able
to cram an older, full-fat Fury or Radeon R300-series GPU into a
notebook without it bursting into flames, which led to Nvidia dominating
in notebooks with its GTX 900-series mobile GPUs. The Radeon RX 470
slipping into these Alienware laptops is an encouraging sign for AMD’s
prospects.
Be sure to check out our coverage of Alienware’s new laptops for the full run-down of their capabilities. (Just looking at them can log you into Windows!) The story behind the story: AMD says the mobile
variant of its Radeon RX 460 chip is capable of “enabling console class
GPU performance in incredible form factors,” such as future versions of HP’s slim Omen laptop. That lines up with what we discovered in our Radeon RX 460 review.
In games, the card’s capable of hitting 30 frames per second at 1080p
resolution at High graphics settings, or 60fps at Medium settings.
The meatier Radeon RX 470 found in these Alienware rigs delivers much
more robust eye candy, surpassing 60fps at High settings in every game
we threw at it, and hovering around that gold standard in most games
even when we cranked graphics options to Ultra. With the Alienware
laptops packing a full-fat version of AMD’s card, you can expect to see
similar results—a damned fine experience for a notebook
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