Acer vs. Asus vs. Dell (TS4)
Hi Gaming Experts 😎,
I am purchasing a laptop soon. For the past three months I've been doing research on the best budget laptops for TS4. I know what the recommended system requirements are, but would like an opinion beyond TS4 requirements. I don't mind playing TS4 on low settings, the laptop must just be good enough to prevent the game from lagging or crashing. I have found the following laptops:
Acer:
https://www.takealot.com/acer-aspire-3-core-i5-1035g1-10th-gen-8gb-1tb-notebook/PLID70980324
Asus:
Dell:
https://www.takealot.com/dell-inspiron-core-i5-1035g1-8gb-256gb-ssd-15-6/PLID60868971
These are the three laptops I have found. All brands build their products differently. For example, gamers say that Dell is not a good gaming laptop, despite it having all the necessary requirements. Therefore, I just need someone's expertise to help me choose one for TS4, its expansion packs and mods. Upgrading the laptop in the future is a possibility as well.
Please Help!
Thanks in advance 🙂
@Mei_Little_Bell All three laptops have integrated graphics chips that share memory. How the product pages describe this setup might vary, but the setup itself is the same: the graphics chip is integrated into the CPU and borrows from main memory (RAM) rather than having its own, as dedicated cards do.
Playing on an integrated chip is going to negatively impact performance relative to a laptop with a dedicated card, but laptops with dedicated cards are more expensive than the ones you found. Within the category of integrated chips, what matters is the speed of the chip, and the G1 chip is faster than an Intel UHD 620.
It looks like the Acer has an empty NVMe slot, which would mean you could add a solid state drive later if you wanted. But the product page doesn't list the model number, so I can't be completely sure—I'm just going on the overall model and year, and guessing that this particular model only has one motherboard and overall layout. If you want to be absolutely sure, contact the seller and ask for the model number, then find the model on this list:
https://www.crucial.com/upgrades/acer/aspire-a3
and see whether there's an NVMe SSD upgrade offered. (You don't have to buy from Crucial, it's just the best site to check for compatiblity.)
Anyway, if you did install an SSD, you'd also want to reinstall Windows on that drive, which would be extra work. It would also likely void the warranty, so you may want to wait until the warranty runs out on its own. But you should then get the same performance, plus or minus some minor differences in speed, as you'd get on the Dell. Whether that's worth the extra cost of the SSD and the extra effort to install it and Windows is up to you.
I will say though that having an SSD is a (usually significant) quality of life upgrade. It doesn't make programs more reliable; Sims 4 wouldn't crash more often if installed on an HDD. Computers are just a lot faster when they have an SSD, so there's much less waiting around while everything loads.