Hunting for over the past few months has been like wandering through the desert and occasionally spotting a small oasis among the dunes. RTX 4070 and RTX 4080 machines are all but gone (for reasonable prices, anyway), and the latest glut of RTX 50-series laptops have been mostly too pricey to recommend. Well, scrap that for now, because I've found tasty discounts on RTX 50-series gaming laptops up and down the stack—and they've only gotten better as Prime Day has gone one, and they're all still live as we enter the Prime Day end times.
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Quick links
- RTX 5060 - Asus TUF F16 |
- RTX 5070 - Asus TUF A16 |
- RTX 5070 Ti - MSI Vector 16 HX AI |
- RTX 5080 - MSI Vector 16 HX AI |
- RTX 5090 - HP Omen Max 16 | [[link]]
Asus TUF F16
We had previously been recommending a $1,100 Alienware Aurora 16 machine in this spot, but that has since gone out of stock, and honestly I'm more than happy with the Asus TUF F16 as a replacement. Sure, it's $60 more expensive, and comes with an older generation of Intel processor, but it's the GPU I'm more concerned with.
And that's the top-end 115 W version—that's the peak power offering that you can get for the RTX 5060 graphics silicon. It's also running a 1920 x 1200 panel in this machine, rather than a 2560 x 1600 screen. Given the Alienware was sporting an 85 W GPU and a higher resolution screen, you're definitely going to get a better end gaming experience with the Asus.
That's worth the extra $60 in my humble opinion.
What's especially encouraging to see in such a budget machine is the RAM and SSD loadout, 32 GB and 1 TB respectively. I've become a little sick of writing "you might want to upgrade the XXX in future" in my laptop deal posts, but this one? It's pretty well equipped from the off.
Asus TUF A16
Mmmm, I fancy this particular laptop for myself. We're dealing with a 1200p screen again, but this time it's paired with a 115 W RTX 5070, which should have no problem making the most of that 165 Hz panel, particularly with Multi Frame Gen engaged.
Plus, we've been very impressed with the new chassis designs of Asus TUF lappys. I reckon this is a downright handsome gaming laptop, and the keyboard is even lit up red (the correct RGB setting) by default. We all know red wunz go faster, right?
The eight-core, 16-thread AMD chip on offer here is a bit beastly, too, considering the very reasonable price. You also get 32 GB of DDR5-5600, alongside a proper 1 TB SSD. In fact, other than a higher resolution panel, I'd say you want for very little here. I'll take high frame rates over high resolution any day, though, .
MSI Vector 16 HX AI
Oh, we like the MSI Vector 16 HX AI. We like it a lot. It's not without its drawbacks, mind. The chassis is rather plasticky, and it can sound a bit like a jet engine when pushed to its absolute limits. Drop it down from the Maximum fan setting to Balanced, however, and it behaves itself very nicely indeed.
Our Dave had a play around with the RTX 5080-equipped model () and came away very impressed with the performance on offer for the cash. The RTX 5070 Ti version, however, should still have plenty of guts, and makes for a potent gaming machine.
This is the cheapest RTX 5070 Ti laptop I've seen so far by a country mile—and while its panel is once again a 1200p unit, it's decently quick at 144 Hz. I'd say this is a pretty overpowered machine for that resolution, which is a good thing if you ask me. It's going to be very unlikely to struggle pushing pixels at that res for quite a long time, so there's a good dose of peace of mind on offer here.
Once you , of course. 512 GB? Really, MSI? Still, it'll get you started at least.
MSI Vector 16 HX AI... again
Now we're into serious performance territory. As mentioned above, my beloved hardware editor-in-chief took a long, hard look at this exact specification of , and called it good. That's a man who's tested more laptops than you've had lukewarm lunches, so I'd take that as high praise indeed.
I had a brief play around with this particular machine myself, and while the chassis is unimpressive, the rest of the laptop is pretty stellar for the cash. You get the 175 W variant of the RTX 5080, which gave our benchmark sheets a bit of a shake-up when slotted into the Vector. It's a rip-roarer of a mobile gaming GPU and one that shouldn't have much issue with the 1600p panel on offer here.
Speaking of panels, a 240 Hz refresh rate is a lovely [[link]] thing once you've got Multi Frame Generation at your fingertips. Oh, and the CPU is a high-spec 24 core (eight Performance, 16 Efficient) Intel unit, too, so it's not like this lappy is lacking in the component department.
Yep, this machine represents a hefty chunk of performance f. Like the RTX 5070 Ti version above, though, be prepared for the fans to get offensively loud without some software tweaking.
HP Omen Max 16
And for my final trick... yep, it's an RTX 5090 gaming laptop . Now, before you go thinking I've stuck pencils up my nostrils and headed for the hills, I know this is a massive amount of money. And I know that the RTX 5090 inside this particular laptop is unlikely to be all that much faster than the RTX 5080 in the MSI Vector above.
That being said, this is the first time I've seen the price of an RTX 5090 machine (technically) start with a two, so I reckon it's worth pointing out here. You get a speedy 240 Hz 1600p display, 32 GB of RAM, a mega Intel CPU, and the knowledge that none of your buddies will have one. Probably.
I've had the opportunity to test this machine recently and it delivers the absolute highest gaming performance that we've seen from any RTX 50-series gaming laptop so far. The larger chassis means that, compared to the svelte RTX 5090-toting RTX Blade 16, the HP Omen Max 16 is noticeably quicker.
That's really the main reason to buy an RTX 5090-equipped laptop, anyway: bragging rights. Still, should you be looking for one that's less than the rest, this is the most well-priced Nvidia mega-GPU machine I've found to date. It's all glowy and pretty, too. What, like image doesn't matter? Give me a break.
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