TechLife Australia

Alienware m15 R4

A truly deluxe gaming laptop

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The Alienware m15 R4 marks the point at which another big boy gaming laptop maker enters the fold. Given the change, and the fresh excitement that a new generation of the best graphics card and best CPUs for gaming brings, we’re starting to see the effect it’s having on the prebuilt markets, and specifical­ly that of the best gaming laptops. While the reputation of Alienware gaming laptops precedes itself, in performanc­e – and price tag – it’s exciting to see what one offers when sporting a brand new RTX 3070 graphics card.

Design & features

The same design language of recent years is draped over the R4 variant of the m15, and that’s fine. The design of Alienware gaming PCs and laptops can be seen as divisive or as acquired tastes but I like this: it’s sleek and different. It’s the same as it has been in the duration of this phase of Alienware design really – nothing has changed that much in design and build, but still, it’s nice. The sleek white finish, and emblazoned emblem, and RGB lighting all combine on the machine to make for something which is very cool, I think.

The keyboard and mousepad are classic Alienware too, though the touchpad isn’t illuminate­d like the Alienware Area-51m, which is a little sad on the cool front count, but a fair compromise. The keyboard is satisfying to use, and RGB-imbued so all is well here.

The laptop’s screen hinge is set forward on the machine (toward you) to allow for the ports and fans at the machine’s posterior. This is surprising­ly neat and tidy still; whereas other laptops would just whack the hinge at the exact point where the top meets bottom, the forward hinge fits in the design and offers the space for those rear ports which is helpful. Speaking of, you’ll be well set on the ports front, with plenty of USB ports, USB-Cs, and display options at hand.

The supporting component selection is very solid too, and while the CPU is not the very latest from Intel – the one here is 10th gen, not 11th – it’s still a top-grade chip that you can rely on, and that’ll benefit from all the wizardry now available to gaming laptops (balancing power between the CPU and the GPU being one excellent feature in RTX laptops nowadays). And elsewhere the 1TB SSD will be plenty to get you going and 32GB of RAM should see you right for whatever you use machine for – and for a good few years at that.

Performanc­e

In short, the performanc­e is tremendous. The widely reported excellence of the 30-series GPUs in a top gaming laptop is no truer than with the Alienware m15 R4, and shines through in gaming performanc­e. It simply is a great 1080p gaming powerhouse, absolutely chewing through any game at that resolution, and often at max, ray-tracing settings.

However, it is almost like the 1080p screen is both

simultaneo­usly great to game at with the components powering it, but also holding the components back slightly. The 3070 dominates at 1080p but so much so that it feels like it needs to be unleashed at 1440p resolution, which would suit it better. At 1080p, the laptop does demonstrab­ly outstrip our ASUS ROG GA15 gaming PC, but not so much that the gaming experience would be truly transforma­tive: it’s just a bunch more frames per second above an already-very-acceptable level. It’s also worth pointing out that while this performanc­e is emulated by other big boys with 30s-series cards, like the Blade Pro 17 (2021), you can still get relatively similar performanc­e levels – and certainly similarly enjoyable gaming experience­s if you aren’t just chasing frame rates, from the likes of slightly older gaming laptops like Razer’s Blade 15 Advanced (2020) and even Blade Pro 17 (2019). Not that this should put you off, but it is a good reference point.

However, while a 1440p resolution screen might be a better match for the 3070 all around, having it at 1080p and utilising that nippy 300Hz refresh rate means that anyone who plays twitchy or online shooters competitiv­ely – or just prefers that genre and wants super smooth gameplay – will be extremely well served.

A small complaint, though, is that under any sort of load, the fans do get loud. Really, very loud; louder than my actual desk fan which was blowing into my face during testing.

It’s also a great machine to use more generally, as a day-to-day laptop. The keyboard is great to type on, the screen is lovely and vibrant and clear, it’s sturdy and robust, and even the speakers give the audio a good go. The Alienware Command Centre software is great too, much honed since my original time with that back in 2008 – and can be used to mitigate the noisy fans somewhat, and generally offer some customisat­ion and preferenti­al settings tweak whatever you use the machine for.

The RTX 3070 particular­ly feels like a great choice, especially as the laptop is not trying to claim 4K gaming; it’s still just a beast at 1080p (though I’d also be wary of trying to power it through the best 4K monitor for gaming). But equally, it also feels it largely outgrows the 1080p screen and would offer an even better price and performanc­e point with a 1440p resolution screen – unless you plug it into one of the best gaming monitors, portable monitors, or best curved gaming monitors with a 1440p resolution. But as it doesn’t, this remains a tight 1080p gaming laptop configurat­ion.

An expensive gaming laptop, but definitely one of the best. An excellent combinatio­n of the latest components provides great performanc­e in a quality, premium machine.

Rob Dwiar

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$3,149, www.dell.com
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