Gigabyte P37X v6 review


OUR VERDICT

  • The P37X is finally a viable 4K gaming machine thanks to an upgrade to Nvidia’s GTX 1070, and it manages to be thinner than its predecessor in the process.

FOR

  • Great gaming performance
  • Sharp 4K display
  • Thin dimensions
  • Great build quality

AGAINST

  • Loud fans under strain
  • No G-Sync
  • Small trackpad
  • A bit pricey

Gaming laptops with 4K displays were for a long time beautiful yet frustrating machines. High-resolution video, websites and icons may have looked razor-sharp on the desktop, but try to fire up a triple-A title and you’d be met with frame rates sludgier than a snail caught in a trail of treacle.

Thankfully, gaming laptops like the Gigabyte P37X came along to solve that. Powered by Nvidia’s new GTX 10-Series of graphics cards, they’re capable of desktop-like performance and make it possible to game at higher resolutions without titles running like slideshows.

Compared to newer entrants like the Acer Predator 17 X that sport 4K displays and are running on Nvidia’s older Maxwell-based GPUs like the GTX 980, the P37X makes much more sense.

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Right on cue, the sixth iteration of Gigabyte’s P37X has turned up packing beefy GTX 1070 graphics and rocking a pin-sharp 4K display. It follows on from its predecessor, the P37X v5, which we reviewed almost exactly one year ago.

The generational leap in graphics is reflected in this new model’s price tag. As configured, our review unit will set you back £1,949 (around $2,431), which positions it out of reach of casual gamers.

With more affordable 17-inch laptops with GTX 1070s and 4K displays out there such as the HP Omen 17, does the Gigabyte P37X v6 do enough to impress?

Design

At 22.7mm in thickness, the P37X v6 is ever-so-slightly thinner than its 23mm-thick predecessor. Its 17.3-inch screen is one of the biggest you’ll see on a gaming laptop these days, and its looks haven’t really changed since the last model, with the laptop being decked in a sea of black plastic.

A silver power button, which feels a little spongy to press and doesn’t always turn on the laptop at the first time of asking, is all that breaks that up. The P37X’s design is low-key enough not to draw too much attention if you got it out in public, which may feel like you’re not getting a machine with enough gamer-cred considering its substantial price tag.

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For better or worse, having such a demure design on a 17-inch laptop is actually something of a rarity these days. And, although it’s fairly thin, the P37X is pretty wide due to having both macro keys (to the left of the keyboard) and a full-sized numberpad to its right.

If you’re concerned about fitting your gaming laptop into a narrow backpack, or on a on a train table, then this could easily be a problem.

On the connectivity front you’ll get a plethora of ports, including HDMI 2.0 (for hooking up a compatible display) and USB 3.0. Gigabyte still feels the need to include a VGA port for some reason, which is a curious decision considering that the P37X’s 4K display will be far better than any VGA-equipped monitor out there. And it’s probably not for business users to hook up projectors, either.

The most interesting port here is the USB 3.1 connection, which uses the new USB Type-C standard. It doesn’t support DisplayPort Active, so you aren’t going to be using it to hook up an external USB-C monitor.

However, you can use it to connect a USB-C hard drive or any other number of compatible peripherals. We previously moaned about the not-so-subtle bright yellow USB-C port in the P37X V5, and Gigabyte has thankfully changed it to a black design for this edition.

The Gigabyte P37X v6 has a monster GPU in the form of the GTX 1070. It’s the mid-strength card in Nvidia’s new Pascal line-up, in front of the GTX 1060 but behind the GTX 1080, and it’s capable of powering the latest titles with graphics dialled up to maximum – in most instances, anyway.

It’s paired with a sixth-generation Intel Core i7-6700HQ Skylake processor, which doesn’t use the latest Kaby Lake architecture but still offers impressive performance.

That means it’s also great for video and photo editing, and it doesn’t break a sweat when you’re in full swing multi-tasking mode. Like the previous model, there’s a capacious 1TB HDD (7200rpm) drive that you can load games onto, while the 512GB SSD hosts Windows 10.

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Keyboard and trackpad

The P37X’s keyboard and trackpad are identical to what has gone on the previous model. The keyboard is comfortable to type on thanks its chiclet-spaced keys that offer a decent amount of key travel. It’s possible to really pick up speed after some practice, and there’s no noticable flex in the keyboard’s build quality. In fact, everything from the keyboard base to the lid is made of a rock hard plastic material that doesn’t easily succumb to flex.

We can’t say that we enjoyed using the trackpad on this year’s model – it’s simply too cramped and makes scrolling across the display with a single finger something of chore even if you increase its sensitivity.

One of the P37X’s best features is its colorful 4K display, which makes everything you do on the laptop – from gaming to productivity work – shine. It’s full of vibrancy and pleasingly bright once you’ve turn off Windows 10’s Adaptive Brightness setting.

You’ll be more than happy using its sizable screen to game on, though on the negative side it doesn’t feature Nvidia’s frame-synching G-Sync tech, meaning you’re still going to have one reason to pick an external display. It’s not a huge loss and probably won’t be a dealbreaker for you, but considering the P37’s price tag we would have liked to have seen G-Sync included.

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Performance

  • Here’s how the Gigabyte P37X v6 performed in our suite of benchmark tests:
  • 3DMark: Cloud Gate: 19,497; Sky Diver: 23,319; Fire Strike: 12,495
  • Cinebench CPU: 679 (cb) points; Graphics: 104.3 fps
  • GeekBench 3: 3,829 (single-core); 13,617 (multi-core)
  • PCMark 8 (Home Test): 3,642 points
  • PCMark 8 Battery Life: 3 hours and 23 minutes
  • Battery Life (techradar movie test): 4 hours and 45 minutes
  • The Division (1080p, Ultra): 72 fps; (1080p, Low): 160 fps
  • GTA V (1080p, Ultra): 52 fps; (1080p, Low): 130 fps

Without G-Sync you’re going to drop a few frames here or there by activating V-Sync in game, but the P37X still serves up incredibly impressive performance thanks to the GTX 1070 inside – particularly at 1080p.

In our benchmark tests, the P37X cranked out an impressive 12,495 points, slightly edging the more affordable HP Omen 17 that has the same graphics card. It also fared well in our demanding GTA V benchmark, matching the Omen’s 52 fps. Ultimately, both laptops are excellent performers, achieving 70 fps in The Division set to Ultra graphics settings.

There’s even enough power here to game at the display’s native 4K resolution, though don’t expect to hit the golden 60 fps mark on the very latest titles without turning the graphics down a notch. We achieved a healthy 45 fps in Doom (2016) played at 4K, compared to a much more playable 86 fps set to 1440p.

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The P37X is a VR-ready machine. We put it through its paces by playing the demanding Raw Data, which can cripple a graphics card when robots begin to fly all over the screen. It coped admirably, maintaining a steady frame-rate on ‘High’, even if the action became too laggy when set to ‘Epic’. As 2016 draws to a close you’re going to need a GTX 1080 in your laptop to cope with VR’s most demanding scenarios.

And, the P37X is very loud. It’s something that we’ve become accustomed to when gaming on machines from Gigabyte and its subsidiary company Aorus. Running demanding VR titles, the P37X sounds like a hairdryer such is the noise that it generates.

The fans are noticeably quieter when you’re playing older games, but if you’re going to push it to its limits (which let’s face it, you are), then it’s not a good idea to play games on the P37X in the family room or while somebody’s sleeping, to put it mildly.

We liked

The Gigabyte P37X V6 hasn’t changed that much compared to its predecessor. The design has been smartened up slightly, and it’s a hair or two thinner, making it one of the slimmest and lightest GTX 1070-equipped laptops on the market, even if it’s also one of the widest.

That graphics card brings desktop-like power in a slim frame, and when paired with a 4K display you have a machine that can easily game at higher resolutions. Added to that, the P37X’s stellar build quality, attractive display, decent port selection and tactile keyboard add up to make a great gaming laptop.

We disliked

Though the P37X has a lot going for it, it’s far from perfect. It’s fairly expensive, for a start, costing much more than some rival GTX 1070 gaming laptops without delivering a meaningful amount (if any) more performance. And when it does its thing, those fans really scream. The P37X could benefit from having a larger trackpad – there’s certainly room for one. And, Gigabyte, please include G-Sync on the next version – the smoothness it brings really can make a difference.

Final verdict

If you’re prepared to pay a little more for a little less (a slimmer chassis, in other words), then the Gigabyte P37X v6 has oodles of appeal. It makes for a great gaming experience on its own, so unless you really want to experience G-Sync then you won’t need to pick up an external monitor.

It’s an all-out desktop replacement thanks to that display, boasts excellent performance, a wide number of ports and comfortable keyboard that will let you frag online enemies until the P37X V7 comes out in, say, around a year’s time.

Sourse: techradar.com

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1 Comment
  1. Reply HiHoeMan December 19, 2016 at 3:17 pm

    Your right about the fans being loud under load but in everyday use i can hardly ever hear them. Switch the fans to quiet mode in work and it has never made me think that they are loud.

    I’m surprised you got 7,472 in FireStrike, i was able to reach 8821? This laptop can get very hot at time under extreme load. I received the new Tomb Raider with purchase of this laptop and the CPU was reaching 96 degrees Celsius at times. I bought a laptop cooler and that has brought it back down to acceptable levels. N.B. other games did not bring it up this high and this is Tomb Raider running on ultra.

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