APC Australia

MSI GT75VR 7RF Titan Pro

A big, loud and pricey ‘everything including the kitchen sink’ gaming laptop.

- Bo Moore

What happens when you put the equivalent of a complete desktop into a notebook chassis, plus a bit of desk? MSI’s GT75VR 7RF Titan Pro answers that question.

It’s gigantic. We’ve tested some large laptops over the years, but at more than 5.5cm thick, the Titan Pro is absolutely massive. A good portion of that is due to the cooling solution, with more than 10 heat pipes, dual exhausts, and twin superlarge, 29-blade fans (more on those later). Adding to the heft is the SteelSerie­s mechanical keyboard, and while its removable keycaps are still chiclet in style, they have a satisfying click that feels great.

The Titan’s insides are quite impressive as well. Computing duties are handled by an Intel Core i7-7820HK processor paired with a whopping 64GB of DDR4-2400 RAM. Storage is capacious, too: 1TB, courtesy of two 512GB M.2 PCIe SSDs in RAID 0, paired with additional storage via a 1TB 7,200rpm HDD. The former is definitely impressive, offering sequential read/ write speeds of 3,391/ 2,947MB/s in CrystalDis­k QD32. It also scored excellentl­y in PCMark 10 Express, with 4,395, one of the highest scores we’ve seen in a laptop.

The Titan Pro is available in several SKUs, dependent on how you like to game. For the display, you can choose between a 4K IPS panel or a higher refresh rate 120Hz 1080p screen that’s a TN panel — both with G-Sync. We tested the former, and while colours looked great, it left us wanting more. We generally try to avoid 4K screens on gaming laptops, as the GPU power required to maintain 60fps in the latest games is difficult even for top-end desktops. The unit we tested came with a single GeForce GTX 1080, which is more than capable at 1080p but can struggle at 4K. (There are also single and double GTX 1070 SKUs available.)

The Titan Pro’s GTX 1080 performed well in our 1080p gaming tests, scoring 76fps in Total War: Warhammer II’s battle benchmark, and 61fps in the demanding Ghost Recon: Wildlands. It was able to handle the slightly older Rise of the Tomb Raider even more easily, scoring an average of 110fps.

As our machine had a 4K screen, so it made sense to test at that resolution, too. At that more demanding resolution, the single GTX 1080 struggled. Tomb Raider, the easiest test, returned scores of 53fps in the Mountain Pass, 44fps in Syria and 43fps in the Geothermal Valley, for an average of 47fps — not great. Meanwhile, the more demanding Total War and Ghost Recon proved even more difficult, with 30fps and 29fps, respective­ly.

In other words, the single GTX 1080 couldn’t maintain 60fps at 4K in any of the games we tested. And if you opt for the 1080p 120Hz panel option that’s available, you’re stuck with a TN screen. For a machine with these sort of internals, we would have much preferred a high refresh rate 1440p IPS screen — especially at this price point.

The Titan Pro boasts a robust cooling system, featuring MSI’s “cooler boost” technology. It certainly succeeded at keeping things cool, but it was incredibly loud doing so. Even after tweaking some settings, the fans made a ton of noise whenever they spun up even a little bit. We had hoped that things would stay quiet during regular gameplay. Alas.

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