MSI’S GE66 RAIDER DRAGONSHIELD EDITION IS A BEAUTIFULLY EXTRA GAMING LAPTOP

The sci-fi design stands out from the crowd

In case you're available for a versatile gaming PC that fills the double needs of running requesting games and making everybody around you desirable, look no farther than the MSI GE66 Raider Dragon shield Edition. This apparatus has a showy head-turning plan, a 300 Hz screen, an exhaustive port determination, outstanding form quality, and probably the best gaming execution you can get from a 15-inch PC. It's not awesome, and $2,899 is an overabundance to spend for extraordinary gaming execution. However, assuming you need to be the individual with the coolest PC in whatever room you end up being in, you will not be disillusioned. 


The normal MSI GE66 Raider has a genuinely standard gaming-PC plan with a dark aluminum top and a dark deck. That is the reason I held on to survey the Dragon Shield version, which in a real sense looks like a piece of a spaceship. It was planned by veteran craftsman Colie Wertz, who dealt with the forthcoming Dune, The Mandalorian, and the new Star Wars films. You can see that impact all around this PC; both the top and the console deck are a dynamic orange and dark, embellished with a science fiction delivery of MSI's logo and a multifaceted matrix of sheets and components. There's a story behind this Raider. Wertz planned it to seem as though a board had tumbled off a spaceship. (It really accompanies a model boat, so you can see precisely where it came from.) It's certain that he put a great deal of work into the Dragonshield's craft — on the off chance that you intently take a gander at the top and deck, you can see the endless mathematical portions that may make up a spaceship's board, and the stray pieces that attach them all together. I love seeing this sort of innovative plan on a PC, despite the fact that it's plainly not reasonable for each setting. It simply shows what amount is conceivable when organizations and architects will attempt. 


You can make the remainder of the PC your own. There's a RGB console with per-key adaptable lighting. (My one problem with the console is that MSI stuck the brilliance and volume controls onto the bolt keys, and the Fn key you need to press to utilize them is a large portion of the size of the remainder of the keys and wedged between the oblique punctuation line and control buttons.) To finish it off, a ravishing LED bar runs along the front edge, which offers 16.7 million adaptable tones. Customary Raiders have this, as well. Clearly, a screwy plan will not affect your gaming execution or day by day utilization at all. The remainder of this audit will give you an exact image of what's in store from the customary GE66 Raider also, and that is unmistakably the more down to earth buy for the vast majority (you can get one with a 2070 Super for as low as $2,199.99). However, in case you're hoping to binge spend on an eye-popping plan, the Dragon Shield is probably surprisingly extraordinary. 


Open this up, and you'll discover a Core i9-10980HK, Nvidia's RTX 2070 Super, 32GB of RAM, 1TB of capacity, and a 15.6-inch 300 Hz 1080p screen. Assuming you need the best casing rates the Raider can offer, you'll need to go up to a RTX 2080 design (as of now, those are just recorded on MSI's site in non-Dragonshield structure). However, be that as it may, the test framework can in any case deal with pretty much any game whatsoever most elevated settings (handle" is emotional, and I'm utilizing it a piece freely here). 


Jumping into the presentation, I was dazzled to perceive how well the Raider ran Horizon Zero Dawn — it found the middle value of 80fps on Ultimate settings. Movement was velvety as I went around Meridian, and shadings looked agreeably splendid. The PC additionally stood its ground on the unbelievably burdening Red Dead Redemption 2, averaging a consistent 50fps and never plunging under 45 all through the implicit benchmark. Those outcomes edge out the RTX 2070 Razer Blade 15 and beat Asus' more modest Zephyrus G14 by a huge degree. 


The RTX 2070 set up 70fps on Shadow of the Tomb Raider's most elevated settings with beam following on ultra. That is playable — it's somewhat better than the RTX 2080 Super Max-Q GS66 will in general score and far superior to the G14. It's really not very distant from what we've seen from the RTX 2080 Super Max-Q Blade 15


You'll have to play less requesting titles assuming you need to see the full brilliance of the 300 Hz screen. Rocket League found the middle value of 250fps on its most noteworthy settings (a similar outcome as the Blade 15 and about all that you can expect, since that game covers out at 250). The Raider additionally floated through Overwatch on epic settings, averaging 124fps and never plunging under 112. 


MSI GE66 RAIDER DRAGONSHIELD EDITION SPECS 


2.4GHz Intel Core i9-10980HK processor (up to 5.3GHz, eight centers) 


32GB DDR4 3200MHz, 16GB (two openings, up to 64GB) 


Nvidia GeForce RTX 2070 Super with 6GB DDR6 


1TB NVMe M.2 SSD (two M.2 spaces, client installable) 


15.6-inch FHD 1920 x 1080 presentation, 300 Hz revive rate, 3ms reaction time 


1080p FHD webcam 


14.09 x 10.51 x 0.92 inches, 5.25 pounds 


Four-cell, 99.9Wh battery 


280W force block 


One USB Type-C 3.2 Gen 2x2, one USB Type-A 3.2 Gen 2, one USB Type-A 3.2 Gen 1, one sound combo jack, one USB Type-C 3.2 Gen 2 (DP1.4), one Mini DisplayPort 1.4, one HDMI 2.0, one RJ45, one SD-card peruser (UHS-111), one AC-in 


Per-key RGB SteelSeries console 


Executioner Wi-Fi 6 AX1650 (2x2) 


Bluetooth 5.1


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