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leah2209's avatar
6 years ago
Solved

Re: Good new laptop for The Sims 4?

Hey Puzzleaddict, 

Could you please tell me whether or not this laptop would run the Sims 4 okay? 

Cheers

https://www.catch.com.au/product/hp-15-6-inch-zbook-15v-g5-p600-4g-70215632-notebook-3697929/

  • @leah2209  Expansion packs are much more demanding than game or stuff packs, especially the recent ones.  So while not running all packs together will save a bit on overhead, you'll still want a strong graphics card to handle EPs like Seasons, Island Living, and whatever else is in the pipeline.

    I don't know how many photos you have, but if it's a large collection, you might need a secondary drive anyway.  Most of the laptops I'm seeing have a 512 GB SSD, which is ideal for performance and price (solid state drives are very fast, large ones are very expensive) but might not hold everything you want.  However, you could also add a second internal drive to most of these models without much trouble; a 1 TB mechanical drive might be $50 or so.  The performance gain of running Windows off an SSD is significant, and I personally would much prefer dealing with a second drive, internal or external, to having Windows on a slow mechanical drive, no matter how conveniently large it is.

    Doing a more thorough search, I didn't find any laptops that were a better deal than the MSI I linked before.  In fact, I saw that same model for $100 more on three other sites, so it's definitely a good deal.  One other option worth considering though is this Asus, which has a somewhat weaker processor (still strong enough for TS4), but a correspondingly better graphics card.  The 1650 is the newer version of the 1050 ti, and Sims 4 will likely benefit down the road from the upgrade.  Still, it's a close call, especially since they're basically the same price.

    https://www.megabuy.com.au/asus-rog-tuf-156-fhd-notebook-laptop-amd-ryzen-7-3750h-gtx-1650-gddr6-4gb-ddr4-8g-512g-ssd-p1010394.html

    (This Asus model is also $100 more on a couple other sites, so it's also a good offer here.)

    The other options I saw with an Nvidia 1650 are all $1500 and up, although some do have better processors and 16 GB RAM.  Here's the best one for the price, on two sites:

    https://www.scorptec.com.au/product/Notebooks/Gaming-Notebooks/77021-NH.Q59SA.010-C77

    https://www.mwave.com.au/product/acer-nitro-5-156-gaming-laptop-i79750h-16gb-512gb-gtx1650-w10h-ac24305

    The processor in this Acer is much better than the others, but it doesn't sound like you plan on doing anything that would require all that extra power.  The extra memory is great, but you could probably buy a second 8 GB RAM stick for $50, maybe less if prices are reasonable; installing RAM is quite simple and doesn't void the warranty.

    And of course there are laptops with even better graphics cards, but they're increasingly expensive—$1600 and up.  I have no idea about your budget, so here are a couple of examples.  (An Nvidia 1060 is somewhat better than a 1650, and a 1660 ti is better than a 1060.  Sims 4 will almost certainly never use more graphics power than a 1060 can provide, even with all packs installed.)

    https://www.mwave.com.au/product/acer-nitro-5-156-gaming-notebook-i7-16gb-128gb1tb-gtx1060-win10-ac19350

    https://www.techbuy.com.au/p/446370/NOTEBOOKS_MSI_GAMING_NOTEBOOKS/ASUS/FX505DU-AL042T.asp

4 Replies

  • @leah2209  I've split your comment into its own topic; it's easier for me to keep track of specs and preferences that way.

    The model you linked would likely handle medium settings just fine, maybe with a few high ones in the mix.  Ultra would be out of the question though, unless you planned on never installing any of the newer expansion packs.  While the processor is more than good enough, the graphics card isn't really meant for gaming, and it would struggle to run the more demanding packs (e.g. Seasons, Island Living) on higher settings.

    This laptop also only has a single 256 GB drive.  That's enough space for Windows; Sims 4 program files, saves, saved builds, etc.; and a few small apps like browsers.  If you wanted to store a large collection of data, like music or photos, you'd need to use an external hard drive or flash drive.

    For $1400 Australian, you could do a lot better.  For example, the first site I happened to try offers this MSI for only $1200.  It has an excellent graphics card, capable of ultra settings with all current packs, although future packs might require dialing that back to high.  (It's not clear what those future packs will look like.)  It has a slightly better processor and a 512 GB solid state drive, which is plenty of storage for most people.  MSI makes great gaming laptops, even at the entry level.

    https://www.umart.com.au/MSI-GL63-15-6in-FHD-i5-9300H-GTX-1050-Ti-512GB-SSD-Gaming-Laptop--GL63-9RDS-866AU_52073G.html

    I'm not saying that this is the best deal, just the first good one that I saw.  Of course, you might have other features in mind that the MSI doesn't have.  If you let me know what you're looking for, I'd be happy to do a more thorough search.  Just let me know what you want, and what you have in mind for a budget.

  • leah2209's avatar
    leah2209
    6 years ago

    Thanks for the reply, you're very thorough!

    Just wanting something that can play the game without lagging. I get most expansions packs but not the other packs. 

    Also wanting something that will hold iTunes and all my photos. Will also do a little work on it so will use it for some Microsoft office programs.and just surfing the net.  

    Cheers

  • puzzlezaddict's avatar
    puzzlezaddict
    Hero+
    6 years ago

    @leah2209  Expansion packs are much more demanding than game or stuff packs, especially the recent ones.  So while not running all packs together will save a bit on overhead, you'll still want a strong graphics card to handle EPs like Seasons, Island Living, and whatever else is in the pipeline.

    I don't know how many photos you have, but if it's a large collection, you might need a secondary drive anyway.  Most of the laptops I'm seeing have a 512 GB SSD, which is ideal for performance and price (solid state drives are very fast, large ones are very expensive) but might not hold everything you want.  However, you could also add a second internal drive to most of these models without much trouble; a 1 TB mechanical drive might be $50 or so.  The performance gain of running Windows off an SSD is significant, and I personally would much prefer dealing with a second drive, internal or external, to having Windows on a slow mechanical drive, no matter how conveniently large it is.

    Doing a more thorough search, I didn't find any laptops that were a better deal than the MSI I linked before.  In fact, I saw that same model for $100 more on three other sites, so it's definitely a good deal.  One other option worth considering though is this Asus, which has a somewhat weaker processor (still strong enough for TS4), but a correspondingly better graphics card.  The 1650 is the newer version of the 1050 ti, and Sims 4 will likely benefit down the road from the upgrade.  Still, it's a close call, especially since they're basically the same price.

    https://www.megabuy.com.au/asus-rog-tuf-156-fhd-notebook-laptop-amd-ryzen-7-3750h-gtx-1650-gddr6-4gb-ddr4-8g-512g-ssd-p1010394.html

    (This Asus model is also $100 more on a couple other sites, so it's also a good offer here.)

    The other options I saw with an Nvidia 1650 are all $1500 and up, although some do have better processors and 16 GB RAM.  Here's the best one for the price, on two sites:

    https://www.scorptec.com.au/product/Notebooks/Gaming-Notebooks/77021-NH.Q59SA.010-C77

    https://www.mwave.com.au/product/acer-nitro-5-156-gaming-laptop-i79750h-16gb-512gb-gtx1650-w10h-ac24305

    The processor in this Acer is much better than the others, but it doesn't sound like you plan on doing anything that would require all that extra power.  The extra memory is great, but you could probably buy a second 8 GB RAM stick for $50, maybe less if prices are reasonable; installing RAM is quite simple and doesn't void the warranty.

    And of course there are laptops with even better graphics cards, but they're increasingly expensive—$1600 and up.  I have no idea about your budget, so here are a couple of examples.  (An Nvidia 1060 is somewhat better than a 1650, and a 1660 ti is better than a 1060.  Sims 4 will almost certainly never use more graphics power than a 1060 can provide, even with all packs installed.)

    https://www.mwave.com.au/product/acer-nitro-5-156-gaming-notebook-i7-16gb-128gb1tb-gtx1060-win10-ac19350

    https://www.techbuy.com.au/p/446370/NOTEBOOKS_MSI_GAMING_NOTEBOOKS/ASUS/FX505DU-AL042T.asp

  • leah2209's avatar
    leah2209
    6 years ago

    Thanks for that info, you've certainly helped me out a lot!

    I've only ever played The Sims on a 'normal' computer so looking forward to having a laptop more suited to it. 

    Appreciate the time and effort you've given me. 

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