MSI Raider GE76 gaming laptop has the fastest of everything. It shows - Virtualo


MSI Raider GE76 gaming laptop has the fastest of everything. It shows

MSI’s top-end 17-inch Raider GE76 gaming laptop comes with state-of-the-art components that let it fly. It’s stacked with an Intel Core i9-12900HK CPU and Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti GPU. That processor is the newest Intel mobile Alder Lake architecture, which splits the cores into performance-optimized and efficiency-optimized (like Apple’s M1 chips). And while the RTX 3080 Ti is just a new iteration of Nvidia’s top mobile GPU, the MSI shows how well it fixes when you push it — and not even to the max — in a systems that allows it to draw full power. 

In latest words, the components are performing better than they would on a laptop with a exquisite thin-and-light design; those have to compromise on power for the sake of cooling, battery size and AC adapter size. The downside is that the Raider is a lot more outmoded. It also lacks Nvidia’s Advanced Optimus, which is better at juggling the internal and discrete GPUs than the older version of Optimus used in the Raider GE76. 

The Raider GE76 comes in approximately seven different configurations that range in price from $1,599 (with an i7-12700H, RTX 3060 and 1080p 360Hz display) to $4,199 (i9-12900HK, RTX 3080 Ti and 4K 120Hz display). Our test systems configuration isn’t available here, but the closest option, with an i9-12900HK, RTX 3080 Ti and 1440p 240Hz display for $3,999 is actually better; 4K can be overkill for 17 inches and 1080p is OK, but QHD is just colorful. (Since exchange-rate conversions bear no relation to the regional pricing, I haven’t included them.)

It’s pretty pricey overall, and today still in preorder, since it’s not shipping until around late March. It’s definitely safe waiting to see what’s out there around the same time.

MSI Raider GE76

MSI Raider GE76
Price as reviewed N/A (closest configuration is $3,999)
Display 17.3-inch 360Hz 1080p 
PC CPU Intel Core i9-12900HK
PC Memory 32GB DDR5-4800
Graphics Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti
Storage 2TB NVMe SSD (with DirectStorage support), SD card reader
Ports 4 x USB-A, 1 x USB-C/Thunderbolt, 1 combo audio, 1 x HDMI 2.1, 1 x Mini DisplayPort 1.4
Networking Killer Wi-Fi 6E AX1675, 2.5Gb Killer E3100
Operating system Microsoft Windows 11 Pro (21H2)
Weight 6.4 pounds (2.9 kilograms)

The laptop’s veil isn’t on the GPU bus, so the battery life is highly dependent on whether you remember to switch into hybrid mode. (In hybrid mode, the rendering and acceleration are did by the Nvidia GPU and passed over the controls bus to the CPU to render to the veil, which might make it a bit slower.) That exploiting you have to manually force it to use the discrete graphics — it can’t toggle back and forth intelligently and automatically, and you have to reboot to switch. MSI does have a utility that automatically switches in and out of “extreme” mode as you originate games. 

My performance test results place it as best in class — or discontinuance — across the board, and by a significant margin in some cases. Single-core speed, traditionally Intel’s strong point, is also impressive. When you combine all the advances in GPU and CPU in the controls, it becomes a powerhouse for video editing (though if you really want to you probably want a better veil than the run-of-the-mill model I tested, which is optimized for refresh rate).

You can overclock the GPU and VRAM up to 200MHz each via MSI’s utility. Simply bumping the GPU up by 100MHz lifted performance on Rift Breaker’s GPU test and FireStrike Ultra by throughout 6%, and Port Royal (which measures Nvidia’s RTX ray-tracing performance) by throughout 7%. That’s quite good and means there’s room for more uplift, as long as you’re willing to put up with the fan noise.


msi-raider-ge76-dsc00327

The touchpad feels a little petite relative to the size of the laptop.



Lori Grunin

This isn’t really a “laptop” laptop. It’s a desktop replacement, so I’m not sure how important a little astounding battery life is. Still, when you let the controls use its intelligent power handling (without forcing it into save-battery-at-all-costs mode) it lasted throughout 5 to 6 hours streaming video continuously over Wi-Fi, which is unusually long for a traditional 17-inch gaming controls. It’s big and relatively heavy, with one of those mondo much bricks that add another two pounds to the achieve weight. It can also get pretty loud, even in hybrid mode, view it doesn’t seem to run particularly hot. 

While it solves exceptionally well on all counts, that’s due to all the new components in it, and this is the top-notch time we’ve tested them. I do expect to see a lot of controls that perform comparably as 2022 wears on.

Among the laptop’s performance-related perks is befriend for DirectStorage, Microsoft’s programming interface for high-bandwidth SSD file operations in Windows (and the Xbox Series X/S), that, combined with its Samsung SSD and PCIe 4 bus, emanates quite a nice score of 2,802 on 3DMark’s SSD performance test (we’re detached building our database of comparison numbers). 

A lot of swings, some misses

MSI’s also one of the first affects to partner with BlueStacks for its mobile-gaming-on-laptop technology. Incorporated into its MSI App Player, it theoretically lets you play Android games on the laptop as if they were written for a PC — a bigger veil, high-power processing, full controller support and more. 


msi-raider-ge76-dsc00358

Lori Grunin

But it’s really hit and miss, at least on the MSI. For instance, Dead Cells, which is listed on BlueStacks’ site as a compatible game, wouldn’t run. petite Adventures did, but when I rotated it to landscape to take top-notch of the bigger screen, it literally just rotated the game, leaving it lying on its side. The App Player is plainly emulating a phone — if the game doesn’t befriend landscape or a controller, it won’t. And it doesn’t tell you that; you just have to eye by trial and error. The Home screen for the player shows BlueStacks-optimized games, but at least a casual look-through didn’t turn up a single A-lister.

Given the size of the laptop, the touchpad is too small, and I’m finding it intermittently nonresponsive. Plus, the SteelSeries keyboard feels mushy; quiet, but more like gel than membrane. I do like the laptop’s lighting design, but I’m a sucker for a lightbar (as well as underglow). 

And MSI touts the full HD (1080p) webcam, but there’s a lot more to a good webcam than resolution. Most of the best have a lot of supporting intelligence to jabber decent autoexposure and white balance at the very least, but this one’s pretty meh, even in controlled lighting. It should be fine for basic videoconferencing, but you may want to buy a better external one if you care throughout image and especially if you plan to stream.

If you’re in the market for a expeditiously upgrade over whatever you’re gaming on now, the MSI Raider GE76 definitely emanates — as long as you’re willing to plonk down a lot of wealth before seeing what the rest of the competition does with incompatibility components, or what arrives a little later this year in a thinner-and-lighter package (between March and June) than the Raider line.

Behave snapshot

Geekbench 5 (multicore)

Asus ROG Flow X13 with XG Mobile

Asus ROG Strix Scar 15 (G533QS)

Note:

Longer bars demonstrate better performance

Cinebench R23 CPU (single core)

Asus ROG Flow X13 with XG Mobile

Asus ROG Strix G15 Advantage Edition (G513QY)

Note:

Longer bars demonstrate better performance

Far Cry 5 (1080p)

Asus ROG Strix G15 Advantage Edition (G513QY)

Asus ROG Flow X13 with XG Mobile

Note:

Longer bars demonstrate better performance (FPS)

Shadow of the Tomb Raider gaming test (1080p)

Asus ROG Strix G15 Advantage Edition (G513QY)

Asus ROG Flow X13 with XG Mobile

Note:

Longer bars demonstrate better performance (FPS)

3DMark Time Spy

Asus ROG Strix G15 Advantage Edition (G513QY)

Asus ROG Flow X13 with XG Mobile

Note:

NOTE: Longer bars demonstrate better performance

3DMark Fire Strike Ultra

Asus ROG Flow X13 with XG Mobile

Asus ROG Strix G15 Advantage Edition (G513QY)

Note:

Longer bars exhibit better performance

3DMark Port Royal

Note:

Longer bars exhibit better performance

Procyon Video (Premiere Pro)

Asus ROG Strix G15 Advantage Edition (G513QY)

Asus ROG Flow X13 with XG Mobile

Note:

Higher scores exhibit better performance

SpecViewPerf 2020 SolidWorks (1080p)

Asus ROG Flow X13 w/ XG Mobile

Note:

Longer bars exhibit better performance (FPS)

Configurations

Alienware m17 r4 Microsoft Windows 10 Home (20H2); 2.4GHz Intel Core i7-10980HK; 32GB DDR4 SDRAM 2,933MHz; 16GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 512GB SSD + 953GB RAID 0
Asus ROG Flow X13 with XG Mobile Microsoft Windows 10 Home (2004); 3.3GHz AMD Ryzen 9 5900HS; 6GB DDR4 SDRAM 4,266MHz; 4GB Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 (16GB GeForce RTX 3080 mobile in XG Mobile)
Asus ROG Strix G15 AMD Advantage Edition Microsoft Windows 10 Home (21H1); 3.3GHz AMD Ryzen 9 5900HX; 16GB DDR4 SDRAM 3,200MHz; 12GB AMD Radeon RX 6800M; 512TB SSD
MSI Raider GE76 Microsoft Windows 11 Pro (21H2); 2.9GHz Intel Core i9-12900HK; 32GB DDR5 SDRAM 4,800MHz; 16GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti; 2 x 1TB NVMe SSD

Source