The exponential surge of interest in esports over the past few years, and ever-developing portable computing tech has no doubt been a large contributor to the countless entries of gamer-targeted laptops currently flooding the market. With last year’s range of Omen gaming laptops by HP, they entered the fray with full confidence, and while a serviceable entry, last year’s 15 and 17 didn’t quite set itself apart amidst other, affordable setups.
Fast-forward to mid-2017, we now have the huge launch of the new OMEN range, HP fully confident they’ve found their answer, the Gyarados to last year’s Magikarp.
Recently, after attending the launch at this year’s OWWC Sydney Group stages (video above), HP were kind enough to send us at Gamers Classified one of their spanking new 17” 120Hz laptops. Over two weeks, we got intimate with the official OWWC PC’s beastly, portable cousin – and with its floor-up redesign, gargantuan specs and all around fantastic gamer experience; suffice it to say, we were not disappointed.
Beauty on the outside.
Superficially, the 17” OMEN Laptop is quite a sight to behold: a jet-fighter-inspired, sharp, powerful design, with demonic, dragon-red logo and accents popping from its shadow-black brushed and patterned surfaces. Materials are mostly dense plastic, with a brushed aluminium keyboard dock, the entire chassis solid and sturdy with no inkling of flex to moderate pressure.
The new port distribution is practically perfect now, and the I/O comprehensive. There are minimal input/outputs on the right side of the laptop (sorry lefties), with the DC port and two of three USBs. The left side is reserved for most of the action: an SD card slot, combo mic jack, another USB, HDMI and mini-display ports, Ethernet, and the option of a $20 Thunderbolt upgrade.
The screen hinge is strong and rigid, and can be opened with one hand on a desk surface, which is always a plus. The small, centred hinge is aesthetically pleasing, but may worry some people, as torsion/twisting could hypothetically occur, although this would mostly occur out of negligence; it would be assumed you’d have it closed during mobile stints with a laptop…
A further look.
When cracking open the device, HP’s work on the keyboard base was instantly noticeable. With its thematic black and crimson palette, the keyboard is eye-catching and its layout traditional. The feel is bouncy, with satisfying, clicky feedback, complemented by its awesome key-rollover and anti-ghosting design. The functionality itself also holds a wealth of additions and improvements, such as the enunciated, red WASD pad, the 6 customizable macro keys and full-size arrow keys – the latter an omission from last year. The entire keyboard is backlit by bright-red, punctuating LEDs, white for the WASD pad, a continuation of OMEN’s thematic flourishes.
The trackpad is responsive, with new, dual-dedicated click button, combined with a matte finish on the pad. The laptop’s sound is a very pleasant surprise; Bang & Olufsen’s dual speakers and the discrete amp really go a long way to making movies, TV, Youtube, or otherwise, completely worth listening to without headphones.
The entire outer shell is a testament to HPs ability to change with the times and needs of gamers, but like a finely bottled gin, what’s inside is what really matters and on that front, you’d be hard pressed to fault what OMEN has in store.
The good stuff.
It’d be a tad too bold of a claim to say that if you’re a desktop gamer, the OMEN may challenge, even eclipse your own rig’s specs, so we’ll just go ahead and gush the juicy stuff, and you can see for yourself.
The OMEN 17’s lightning-fast 128GB SSD gets those boot times cracking like a whip, and the RAM – fully upgradable to 32GB – on our model, came with 16GB worth of RAM over two slots. The lack of optical drive is completely excusable insofar as a gaming laptop is concerned, and the same goes doubly for the battery, while bigger, holds the same 4-5 hour longevity and around 90 minutes for an intensive game or content creation.
Though, to put all this beef to use with some stunning games, although less theoretical, is the crux of HP’s promised experience, and despite how much specs and hardware tell you, there’s only one way you can be shown – in practice, where OMEN’s laptop truly shone.
From the Triple AAA titles we’ve had access to, most have easily ran at 60 frames per second on high settings. It’s assumed based on a bit more research that almost all triple AAA titles would exceed 60 fps, though extremely tasking titles such as Battlefield 1 and PUBG get around 57 on ultra, and 47 on high, respectively.
Up close and personal.
As the main reviewer of the device, I chose three primary games to judge my core experience as a gamer. It’s worth noting, although I’m familiar and versed in PC gaming, I’ve personally grown up a console kid at heart, so these are not only in my belief good tests, but also three of my favourite games on console (yes, the graphical differences are making me cry inside):
The Witcher 3. Even 2 years on, CD Projekt Red’s masterpiece, with all its graphical updates, provides a brilliant platform to test what your rig can do. The character animations are still some of the best around, turning on Nvidia HairWorks boasts some of the best texture animation I’ve ever seen in a game, and pumping the ultra settings still nets you a steadily smooth framerate, with no graphical compromise.
Sunset over Novigrad has never looked more sumptuous.
Overwatch. Because of course! The OMEN PC is, as mentioned, the official PC of the 2017 Overwatch World Cup, and HP has evidently targeted the budding and pro esport community with the entire range.
The 120Hz display is a dream, especially considering its breakneck refresh rate and Blizzard’s penchant for vibrant colours. Overwatch has a setting above Ultra called Epic that I just had to pump the game to, still enabling it to run at a silky 110 fps, give or take of course. Overwatch was also where keyboard truly shone, those macro keys just a pinkie-click away.
Ori and the Blind Forest. One of my favourite games, my opportunity to try the PC version, and what I hoped to be a good contrasting experience to the console version, Ori sadly does not have any substantial graphics settings, making it more of a marker on the display – however, this was a great opportunity to test the speakers, and as mentioned, the sweeping score and full-bodied sound effects that I grew to know and love years back were done justice… With laptop speakers.
A promise fulfilled.
In its arsenal of flaunted tech, from the gorgeous casing to the wonderful keyboard to the manifold, formidable specs, HP’s dragon-red promise to gamers seems completely fulfilled. In its design, HP has completely and successfully geared their laptop range, with pinpoint precision, to the very serious gamers out there.
As a gamer, the OMEN 17 really opened my eyes to how far gaming laptops have come these past few years. I was floored on almost every level: the lustrous refresh rates on esports-oriented titles, demanding triple-A games never struggling in every way a gaming laptop potentially could, and being able to trace back HP’s service to gamers in every design and tech choice that went into the 17.
Personally, I’m just sad to see it go back on Monday, but colour me extremely thankful to HP for the experience all the same!
Matthew Waite @watt-maite
Gamers Classified
Source
Website: https://www.gamersclassified.com/
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/gamesclassified
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/gamersclassified
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gamersclassified
Well written review.. (Heavy breathing)
If only I could keep it haha!
Upvoted & RESTEEMED!
Thank you very much sir!
sweet machine ! nice share @gamersclassified
Glad you enjoyed the read :)
Votes plz
This looks pretty cool. Must be very powerful if it is the official computer for the Overwatch tournament.
It was indeed extremely powerful.. Makes me desktop look slow!
big ballin'! I'm sure all gamers would do anything to own that laptop. It kinda looks like Alienware.
Indeed. Gaming is big business now and everybody is trying to get in haha
Oh I bet. My friends are addicted to it, I'm not familiar with what they're playing but they are online like 12 hours a day playing games on their laptop. It's addicting coz they sell some of their weapons to other gamers. It's how they make money. :-)
The system you recommend here is overpriced. For $1000 less you can get a more powerful machine built by a brand with a much better reputation: https://newegg.com/products/N82E16834154667