Best laptop for max settings, moderate $ (Canada)
Hi everyone! The few posts I've seen on this matter have been informative for those looking for some laptops in their area. I'm hoping someone can also kindly help direct me to some laptops that I can get in Ontario, Canada, (and I can order from Amazon Prime, and Canadian stores online with low/free shipping), that would enable me to run The Sims 4 smoothly on max settings, and hopefully The Sims 3 on high/max (I'd use a FPS limiter). I do also have The Sims 2 and 1 installed on my desktop but I can do without them in the laptop.
I have all packs, and I use some mods/CC - but not a lot of CC. My desktop is pretty high-end despite being about 5 years(?) old, and plays Sims 4 on max settings, and because I have zero knowledge/familiarity with laptops, I'm hoping some of you who do play the game on a laptop can share your experiences about how it runs on max settings without laptop mode.
Budget: $800 CAD (preferably after taxes which is 13% here, & preferably cheaper if possible). If there is something truly amazing, we can TRY to stretch this out a little bit, but we're already stretching as-is with the current budget.
Uses: The Sims 4 (priority), MS Office/work (priority), Adobe Photoshop CS3 for photo-editing, possible Twith streaming via/recording YouTube with Streamlabs OBS and my webcam, using Zoom, YouTube/Netflix; unsure if I will use video editing but I use Shotcut video editor.
Preferences:
- Brand new, although tested reburbished might be ok
- I would like the laptop to be able to last at least 3 years & hopefully be "future pack" ready
- Backlit keyboard, lightweight
- Windows system pre-loaded
- Fast/quick-processing, good battery life & good cooling (I assume most modern laptops have decent cooling?)
I am looking for something that is basically a substitute for my computer, that I can take on-the-go, use in bed/when I'm out, and both play the game as I do on my computer, AND also work.
If you need any other info, please let me know. I am grateful for any advice/help with this.
P.S. Would I be able to access my packs via Origin on the laptop and install everything without issue? I've only ever previously played games using a CD where multiple installs were ok.
@RenegadeKittyOG While you might find a nominally upgraded laptop in your price range, I don't think the improvements are worth it given what you'd get for your money. In terms of what you'd see:
Processor: The only better laptop CPU for your purposes would be a 4800H, and that almost always comes in significantly more expensive (at least $200) models. The extra power will be lost on Sims 4—the 4600H is already more than the game could ever use. Video editing would be faster, but the 4600H will still be great.
Graphics card: The next faster card is a 1660 ti, but that's $1,100 and up before taxes even without any other improvements in hardware. The 1650 will run everything on ultra settings now, and it might handle ultra for the entire run of the game; at worst, you'd always be able to play on a mix of high and ultra.
Memory: Most laptops in this price range come with 8 GB RAM, and the few that have 16 GB tend to charge at least twice the value of the RAM for the privilege, again without any other upgrades. More importantly though, there aren't many configurations with 16 GB available, so your options would be limited.
Storage: While some gaming laptops come with a 256 GB solid state drive and a 1 TB mechanical drive, offering more storage overall, I don't think you'd benefit from that. Sims 4 will load much faster on an SSD, although it runs the same on any drive once it's loaded. Your other programs will run a lot faster on an SSD though. 256 GB would be a tight fit for Sims 4 and all the photo editing you might want to do, so you'd end up spending time juggling the two drives, transferring stuff you wanted to work on to the SSD or living with the longer wait of the HDD. A single 500 GB SSD is more convenient, and it's plenty of space. Plus, if you need an external drive in a year or two, you could probably find one for $50. There are gaming laptops that come with a 1 TB SSD, but at least in the U.S., they're usually over $1,000 and only come in the higher-end models.
So no, I don't think it would be worth spending more on a nominally upgraded laptop. The only real improvement you'll see is from adding RAM, and much better to do it yourself.
It's crazy now, but it's also Saturday, and I just refreshed the tech section main page to find no new posts since I looked 20 minutes ago. It's such a relief. Besides, talking tech specs is a nice change of pace from trying to figure out what's broken with the game this time.
P.S. I should have known I was going to jinx it. Six minutes after I posted, there were three new replies.