TechLife Australia

Gigabyte SabrePro 15

A SOLID ALL-ROUNDER THAT REALLY SHARPENS THE POINTY-END OF THE GAMING LAPTOP MARKET.

- [ JOEL BURGESS ]

WHEN IT COMES to affordable gaming laptops, there’s an expectatio­n that you’ll settle for less-premium chassis materials, make a sacrifice in the overall design aesthetic and get generally bulkier and lower-end components. We were fond of Gigabyte’s Sabre 15 when we tested it a few months back (see TechLife 64, page 49), as it managed to undercut competitor­s at this end of the market with minimal sacrifices. But when you go below the $2,000 mark, all those above shortcomin­gs are pretty much a given — and as good as the Sabre was, it did entail a lot of sacrifices.

So, naturally, when we got a glimpse of the new SabrePro 15 at this year’s Computex, we weren’t sure whether the profession­al portmantea­u was purely nominal or whether the upgrade would bump up the price and encroach on Gigabyte’s performanc­e-focused P-series laptop range. Either way, we didn’t suspect it’d be a particular standout. But here, Gigabyte has managed to take the best bits of its cheaper Sabre design and figurative­ly dip them in gold — well... slick black aluminium.

Underneath its subtly accented, stylishly vented and crafted brushed-aluminium chassis, the SabrePro 15 offers up a pleasingly deepfeelin­g, full-sized keyboard with 2mm travel distance scissor-switch keys. The good-looking but commonplac­e 15.6-inch 1080p IPS screen is underpinne­d by an Intel Core i7-7700HQ CPU, 16GB of DDR4 RAM and a combined total of around 2.25TB storage space. While the first two components here perform predictabl­y well, marching out a solid score of 4,845 on PCMark 8’s Home benchmark, the 2TB HDD is a bit of an unexpected bonus — it’s double the size of what you’d expect at this price, and it’s paired with a 256GB Samsung PCIe SSD (where Windows 10 is installed) that cranks out impressive sequential read speeds of 1,705MB/s and will push belligeren­tly-fast boot times.

While the earlier Sabre 15 featured a somewhat conservati­ve GeForce GTX 1050 Ti GPU, the SabrePro 15 bumps this up to the VR-ready 6GB GeForce GTX 1060. In terms of raw 3DMark benchmark scores, this equates to a 25–45% boost, depending on the test, which was consistent with our real-world benchmarks on BioShock Infinite, The Division, Far Cry Primal and Metro: Last Light, where the 1060 outperform­ed the 1050 Ti by 28–55%. For broader reference, the SabrePro 15’s GTX 1060 GPU is still outpaced by higher-performanc­e parts like the GTX 1070, as seen in Gigabyte’s P57X v6; in Batman: Arkham Knight and Tomb Raider, the 1060 offers up 1080p Ultra scores of 71 and 156fps compared to the 1070’s 113 and 213fps. This less-power-hungry GPU does allow the 56Wh battery to last around 2 hours in PCMark 8’s demanding battery benchmark, though, which is a passable result.

The Gigabyte SabrePro 15 delivers an appealing mix of mid-range and higher-end components and manages to offer features we once considered exclusive to pricer units. As a bonus, the SabrePro 15 not only includes faster PCIe SSD storage but also packs an HDD that’s bigger than anything else in the price range. While its 2.5kg body is a bit heavy, it’s still light enough to cart about. The core components have been carefully considered and it comes in at hundreds of dollars under anything we’ve seen with comparable specs.

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