TheOverclocker Issue 29 | Page 45

Catzilla 1.3 1080p: 7494 3DMark Firestrike: 5503 PCMark 8 Creativity Suit: 5184 Battery test (PCMark8): 97min35sec if you’re reading this you’re already familiar with the GTX 680 and how it performs. By the time you reach any resolution or setting that is loading up the frame buffer where you need even 3GB of memory. The performance is just not there. There is not a single scenario we can imagine where this overly generous buffer is going to be of use to you. Yet you’ll have to pay for it which without question is driving up the price of the machine. This is analogous to the much touted (by MSI of course) Super RAID 2 configuration which is fantastic on paper, but doesn’t really translate into real world performance at all. This is simply a name for three 128GB mSATA drives in RAID, promising sequential data rates of up to 1,500MB/s. Speed is great and we can never have enough of it, but again. In my storage testing we found that it wasn’t any faster than a two drive configuration. Mind you it still offers blistering performance. Together with Windows 8.1 there’s simply no waiting for anything to load. It’s truly magnificent to use, but I can’t help but feel yet again, this is overkill that ends up costing the end user unnecessarily. Those two things though are the only aspects of this machine I have qualms about. Everything else is geared up just right and MSI has gone the extra mile with this unit. Not only do you get the notebook, but a nice ambidextrous gaming mouse. It’s a little on the small side so people with big hands may opt for a 3rd party mouse, but it does work well. It’s as sensitive as you’ll need any mouse to be really even though it could do with slightly better weight distribution. It does tend drag at the sides. Button actuation is a little shallow as well. I must say though, for a free mouse it’s very useable and it is a worthwhile addition to the package. Another accessory and perhaps a much valued one is the SteelSeries Siberia V2 gaming headset. As far as gaming cans go, these are amongst the better ones and perhaps could be considered mid to high end. On their own you could spend up to $100 on them, but MSI includes them for free (in some regions and with the specific configuration we tested). These accessories amongst everything else help to make this easily the most powerful and most focused gaming notebook MSI has ever sent my way. Is it a perfect system, no it’s not but its close enough to warrant its price tag. For this kind of power and configuration, you’re not likely to find a lighter notebook or one that can claim to have better battery power. The GT70 Dominator Pro really is at the forefront of what is possible to fit into a notebook. There is a lot that I didn’t mention here like the excellent tactile feedback keyboard and its SteelSeries Engine software, the Dynaudio speaker system with a headphone amp and host of other things. These are important features and ones that you will certainly be grateful to have. It’s more than just the sum of the components here, but it’s in how it all comes together to make a compelling gaming machine that you can take on the road. From where I stand, there aren’t any gaming notebooks that can claim to be better than the GT70 Dominator Pro. For all its missed opportunities, it still provides the most compelling package I have ever come across for the very high end gaming notebooks. If your pockets are deep enough and you’re looking. I would strongly suggest you start here.  [ Iron-Synapse ] Issue 29 | 2014 The OverClocker 45