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Asus G51J 3D Laptop review

in Laptops

Verdict

The 3D effect is better than ever, but building it into a 15.6in laptop creates more than a few issues

Review Date: 19 Mar 2010

Reviewed By: David Bayon

Price when reviewed: £1,362 (£1,600 inc VAT)

Overall Rating
4 stars out of 6

Features & Design
5 stars out of 6

Value for Money
3 stars out of 6

Performance
5 stars out of 6


The G51J exists in non-3D models as well, so there’s more to it than just visual wizardry. An Intel Core i7-720QM processor and 4GB of DDR3 RAM sit at its heart, powering the Asus to 1.56 in our benchmarks, and in Crysis it managed an almost-playable 23fps at 1,600 x 1,200 and High quality settings. It’s a powerful laptop.

Given its 3.68kg weight and a light-usage battery life of 2hrs 15mins it isn’t exactly portable, but it’s certainly a comfortable laptop to use. There’s space for a full keyboard and number pad, with no unnecessarily miniaturised keys or quirky layouts. The WASD keys have cursor arrows on them to help novice gamers, and the touchpad and buttons are responsive and nicely sized. Our only complaint is the keyboard backing, which is a bit squishy and uneven in places.

Asus G51J 3D Laptop

The 1,366 x 768 display is very reflective – you’ll need a dark room to eliminate distractions while using 3D – but it’s sharp and clear, with accurate, punchy colours and an even backlight. An HDMI port raises the possibility of outputting the 3D gaming experience on a 120Hz HD TV, although the limitations of the mobile GPU will mean lowering a lot of settings if you’re hoping for Full HD.

There’s an eSATA port for added storage, but you'll rarely need it thanks to the pair of 500GB hard disks inside. Asus also includes a Blu-ray reader, along with 802.11bgn wireless and Bluetooth. A 2-megapixel webcam sits in the rather ugly plastic bezel, and the whole thing has a bit of a boy-racer style that will appeal to its core audience but not many others.

All in all, the G51J 3D is a nice piece of gaming kit if you like to push the boundaries with technology, but we’re not totally convinced a 15.6in laptop is the best way to experience 3D; a 17in or larger system would allow more room for cooling. Then there’s the Asus G51J’s price: at £1,362 it’s hardly cheap, even if that does include the glasses and a carry case. Early adopters will find enough to like, but everyone else should give 3D a bit more time to settle on laptops before shelling out.

Author: David Bayon

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User comments

ASUS clearly the inventor of PC market

ASUS becoming the leader in innovation and quality in PC market (not only inventing netbooks but they clearly lead the way from mainboards to laptops). That means I am becoming a true ASUS fanboy!

By HopeLESS on 19 Mar 2010

Glasses?

So what if you are one of the huge number of people who wear glasses already? Presumably this laptop becomes unusable?

By cpicking on 20 Mar 2010

Actually, I tried the glasses on top of my glasses - and it was really ok - though my glasses are small and round, and the experience was 3D :) though I tried it with the Acer model not this one.

By nicomo on 21 Mar 2010

headaches?

I love the idea of 3d gaming (believe me I need the relaxation) and after HD it would be the next big tech progression. That said the tech you need to play it will have to drop in price a fair bit before I'd shell out for it but actually seeing 3D capable computers does excite me. I do have worries over the health concerns. I am no expert but have heard that there is an increased risk of headaches with use of the 3D glasses required. As someone who suffers headaches already, this concerns me greatly.

By stormN on 22 Mar 2010

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