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TechCES

Samsung Just Unveiled Its First Gaming Notebooks

By
Matt Peckham
Matt Peckham
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By
Matt Peckham
Matt Peckham
Down Arrow Button Icon
January 4, 2017, 5:16 PM ET
SKOREA-ECONOMY-SAMSUNG-EARNINGS
People walk past the logo of Samsung Electronics at the company's headquarters in Seoul on January 28, 2016. Slowing global demand for smartphones as well as memory chips dealt a blow to Samsung Electronics as it reported a 40 percent on-year drop in fourth-quarter net profit. AFP PHOTO / JUNG YEON-JE / AFP / JUNG YEON-JE (Photo credit should read JUNG YEON-JE/AFP/Getty Images)Jung Yeon-Je—AFP/Getty Images

If you’re an aficionado of boutique gaming laptops from outfits like Razer, Alienware or Origin, you can add Samsung to the list of contenders. The company says it’s getting into the portable powerhouse biz with its new Samsung Notebook Odyssey series, available in either 15.6-inch or 17.3-inch variants.

The reveal comes as the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) kicks off in Las Vegas, running from January 5 to 8.

Samsung isn’t yet saying how much they’ll run, but the new models seem aimed at gamers who value speed over extreme fidelity. The 17-inch and 15-inch screens, for instance, top out at 1920-by-1080 pixels, making them mediocre compared to work-angled laptops with up to 4K displays, but just fine for gamers who put a premium on high frame rates at 1080p’s still respectable 2 million-plus pixel count.

You can drop up to a 7th-gen Intel Core i7 processor into your build, says Samsung, adding that these will be quad-core 45W parts, thus one of the just-released Intel Kaby Lake variants. The 15-inch model supports up to 32GB of DDR4 2.4 GHz memory and 256GB solid state drive or 1TB hard disk drive (or both in tandem), while the 17-inch can take up to 64GB of memory and offers a 512GB solid state drive option.

While the 17-inch model’s graphics processing unit is still “TBD,” the 15-inch comes with Nvidia’s GTX 1050 for laptops, a mobile version of the October-launched desktop budget part. Nvidia just announced the mobile GTX 1050, so it’s not clear what real world performance looks like — there’s a faster “Ti” version that appears to be nearer the October-launched desktop’s specs. Maybe that’ll land in the 17-inch version?

For more about Samsung, watch:

Otherwise there’s some cosmetic differentiation based on keyboard types (the 17-inch model lets you fiddle with the key colors), as well as port types (the 17-inch model has a Type-C port and four USB 3.0 ports, the 15-inch model only has one USB 3.0 port and two USB 2.0 ports). Also, no surprise, the 17-inch model is a bit of a whale at over 8 pounds, contrasted with the 15-inch model’s 5.5 pounds. That’s in part because the 17-inch model has a heftier 93 Wh battery (compared to the 15-inch model’s 43 Wh version). But then you’d expect it to, given its power-hungrier parts.

Samsung didn’t say when the new systems would be available, but presumably soon.

This post was originally published at Time.com

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