More or less the same.Il3rotherhood wrote: »a laptop with 1050ti and runs great on high settings. 40fps in highly populated cities and up to 80 fps when you are alone in Alik'r... Didnt try cyrodiil yet tho
VvardeFellow wrote: »I've narrowed my list of laptops for purchase, with ESO being pretty much the only gaming I will do. I asked for imput in a previous post, and thank you for all who provided very valuable information. That said, the price range of laptops pretty much has 1050TI and 1060 as GPU's, and Intel 8750H for CPU's.
So, I'd very much like to hear from anyone who plays ESO on a laptop with 1050TI and 1060 GPU's, and in particular anyone who plays ESO on a newer (late 2017, 2018) Razer, which can have a MX150, or a 1060, and an Intel 8565U.
Thanks.
VvardeFellow wrote: »I've narrowed my list of laptops for purchase, with ESO being pretty much the only gaming I will do. I asked for imput in a previous post, and thank you for all who provided very valuable information. That said, the price range of laptops pretty much has 1050TI and 1060 as GPU's, and Intel 8750H for CPU's.
So, I'd very much like to hear from anyone who plays ESO on a laptop with 1050TI and 1060 GPU's, and in particular anyone who plays ESO on a newer (late 2017, 2018) Razer, which can have a MX150, or a 1060, and an Intel 8565U.
Thanks.
You probably won’t be playing on ultra but you’ll be fine. For decent performance probably something like high textures and sub sampling, low shdows, water reflections off, decent view distance like 50-60, default particle settings, some or all special effects depending on situation. Bloom, sunlight rays and grass are all doable. Some user setting tweaks should help too. They’re floating around.
The performance benefit of the next generation nvidia isnt likely to be very high as seen in previous generations, so if that means saving money, then I would say go for either the 1050ti or 1060. What laptop are you eyeing?
Il3rotherhood wrote: »I just bought a laptop with 1050ti and runs great on high settings. 40fps in highly populated cities and up to 80 fps when you are alone in Alik'r... Didnt try cyrodiil yet tho
blacksabsub17_ESO wrote: »Sorry OP.....Razer? You can do so much better. Check out Sager or one of the re-sellers. Xoticpc, LPC Digital etc... or even a DEll G7. Razer brand is garbage.
P.s. Always buy the best gpu you can afford at the time of purchase.
AlienatedGoat wrote: »VvardeFellow wrote: »I've narrowed my list of laptops for purchase, with ESO being pretty much the only gaming I will do. I asked for imput in a previous post, and thank you for all who provided very valuable information. That said, the price range of laptops pretty much has 1050TI and 1060 as GPU's, and Intel 8750H for CPU's.
So, I'd very much like to hear from anyone who plays ESO on a laptop with 1050TI and 1060 GPU's, and in particular anyone who plays ESO on a newer (late 2017, 2018) Razer, which can have a MX150, or a 1060, and an Intel 8565U.
Thanks.
GPU matters very little in ESO as the game isn't that graphically demanding - the majority of work is done on your CPU, on a single thread (yes "multithread support" exists, but it is incredibly unoptimized - most work is still on a single thread). 1060 is more than enough GPU for ESO, so I'd try getting as good a CPU as you can since you want this to be a dedicated ESO laptop. This will minimize your CPU single thread bottleneck, and future-proof you a little down the road for the game. I'd advise at least an i7 8850H if you're aiming for ultra-high settings. Stay away from U-series, they're not good gaming CPUs.
playsforfun wrote: »i got a 1050ti 4gb with i5 7300q processor laptop and it runs the game fine on high settings no issues even in pvp it's ok
Don't get a Razer. Their sleek bodies may look good but overheat way too easily unless you have the fans blasting like a wind-turbine. They're good laptops for general use, but they're basically more powerful Macbooks that run on Windows
I personally have an ASUS ROG GU501GM from Best Buy and I love it. It's got a 1060, i7 8th gen processor, and 16 GB RAM at a fraction of the cost of a comparable razor (1200 dollars on sale for me, full price is 1500
I've also done a bit of research on graphics cards and found the difference between those two is negligible with the 1050Ti coming slightly behind the 1060
I personally am running the game on an asus laptop with a 1060 with 6gb vram, 16 ram and an i7 7700hq. Every setting maxed except for water reflections and most of the time my fps is in the 70-80 range in cities such as mournhold. Can dip into the 40s at dolmens like alik'r. Never had any lag issues in cyrodiil nor BGs. I do use a cooling pad because boy the laptop gets hot.
pikapp515_ESO wrote: »I built my computer around ESO five or so years ago and hem and haw'ed over specs with the help of an incredibly good tech gal. My 770 GPU is still running ESO at top performance, mainly because of the i7 CPU. ESO is CPU hungry. That's the biggest bottleneck. Whatever you get, get an i7. That will be more valuable than your GPU for ESO. I do recommend the 70 version of your graphics card though.
VvardeFellow wrote: »I personally am running the game on an asus laptop with a 1060 with 6gb vram, 16 ram and an i7 7700hq. Every setting maxed except for water reflections and most of the time my fps is in the 70-80 range in cities such as mournhold. Can dip into the 40s at dolmens like alik'r. Never had any lag issues in cyrodiil nor BGs. I do use a cooling pad because boy the laptop gets hot.
Excellent. I'm worrying less about CPU and GPU the more feedback I get. It's pretty much price point and slim/trim now.
VvardeFellow wrote: »The performance benefit of the next generation nvidia isnt likely to be very high as seen in previous generations, so if that means saving money, then I would say go for either the 1050ti or 1060. What laptop are you eyeing?
Razer 15", Lenovo Legion 530. Lenovo X1 extreme. Different configs the low would be $1200 something, high $1800.