After spending weeks with ASUS’ fantastic ROG line of gaming laptops, the HP Omen 15 feels a little too plain and boxy. It’s all angles and edges, even the logo, which is just a square piece of reflective plastic. On opening it up, the laptop’s interior isn’t any less plain. The edges of the palm rest are sharp, the keyboard backlight is colourful, but also plain. The keyboard is, in fact, so featureless and plain that it took me several seconds to figure out where the power button was.
What I’m trying to say is: this laptop is very plain.
This plainness extends to the RGB backlit keyboard, the feel of the keys, and even the bundled system management software, which literally has no flair to speak of. The latter’s design is functional, but very plain. There are no animations, no transitions between tabs, nothing.
The keyboard is RGB backlit, yes, but the backlight is split into four distinct zones: three broad swathes of colour and one WASD zone to highlight the movement keys. There’s no auto brightness control, or rainbow effect, or gradation. You just get four solid blocks of colour that you can tweak.
There’s also something off about the keyboard. Normally, my fingers just kind of naturally adapt to a laptop’s keyboard layout. On the Omen, they just didn’t. I was constantly mistyping letters, pressing Shift instead of Enter, and more. I got used to the layout in the end of course, but it took a little while.
It might seem odd that I’m talking about the feel of the laptop before I discuss specs or performance, but this is what hits you when you pick up the machine. It just looks and feels so… plain.
And speaking of specs, they aren’t really that special either. The unit I’m reviewing, specifically the HP Omen 15-ek0019TX, comes with an Intel Core i7-10750H CPU, 16 GB RAM, a 1 TB SSD, and an Nvidia GeForce 1650 Ti GPU. The CPU is quite powerful, but the GPU is one of the cheapest mobile GPUs that qualifies as a gaming GPU.
Looking at my test scores, hardly anything stands out. You get 65 fps in Shadow of the Tomb Raider at medium settings, 50 fps in Metro Exodus using the ‘Normal’ preset, 66 fps at Medium settings in The Division 2, 53 at medium in Borderlands 3, and a respectable 78 fps at Normal settings in Modern Warfare. These are middling results.
The video transcoding and code compile tests both took about half an hour, which is, again, about average.
Overall, performance is, you guessed it, average. You can game of course, but you’ll have to lower settings to medium or normal to manage a playable 50-60 fps.
Three things do stand out, however.
- The display, which, at 250 nits, is brighter than normal. At 85% sRGB, it’s also more colourful than the average display.
- The speakers are quite loud for a Windows laptop.
- Thermal management is good and all the heat is dissipated out the back, ensuring that your fingers on the keyboard and your mouse hand don’t get roasted when gaming.
So, do I buy it or not?
Well, there’s nothing in particular that stands out, but there’s also nothing in particular that’s wrong with the Omen 15. So I guess you could buy it.
I’d lean more towards the ASUS G14 line for aesthetic flair and performance, but those laptops also tend to run exceptionally hot, which can be a problem for longer gaming sessions. Lenovo’s Legion laptops are also a great alternative, but they’re only slightly less plain than the Omen is. MSI’s budget laptops, and the ASUS TUF line, are cheaper and offer similar configs for about 20k-30k less, but the displays they offer are quite terrible and I’d avoid those models if I can.
If you are getting this laptop, the only recommendation I do have is that you ditch the Intel CPUs and get the AMD configs instead. This i7, 1650 Ti model costs Rs 1.21 lakh. An AMD model with a more powerful CPU and far more capable RTX 2060 GPU can be had for just Rs 3,000 more.
from Firstpost Tech Latest News https://ift.tt/3kVt7SD
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