
If price is no object and you want the best gaming laptop on the market, reviewers say the Alienware M17x is the one to get. This 17-inch notebook earns numerous accolades, including Editors' Choice awards from Laptop Magazine, ComputerShopper.com and PCMag.com. Reviewers are nearly unanimous in saying that the Alienware M17x offers the best gaming performance you can get in a laptop -- but only if you're willing to spend to get it. For 2010, the Alienware M17x has been refreshed with Intel's latest processors. The base model features a 2.4 GHz Intel Core i5 CPU, but Intel Core i7 processors (*Est. $150 and up) are available as an upgrade option. Most reviewers test upgraded models that cost upwards of $4,000, complete with dual graphics cards, 8 GB of memory, a 1,920-by-1,200-pixel LCD display and a slot-loading Blu-ray drive. Reviewers generally say that serious gamers will want the upgrades to truly unlock the potential of this gaming laptop.
Reviewers haven't retested the Alienware M17x since this year's processor upgrade, but performance should be as good or even better. Based on previous testing, multiple reviewers rave that the Alienware gaming laptop is the fastest gaming notebook they've tested. There are two big drawbacks, however, and they may be deal-breakers for some gamers. The obvious one is that the Alienware M17x can be very expensive. It also weighs 11.68 pounds and has a battery life of less than two hours, so it's not for those who value portability. If cost and weight are a concern, the new Alienware M11x (*Est. $800 and up) weighs less than 5 pounds. It has excellent performance for a small laptop, but it can't match the performance of the Alienware M17x when it comes to playing demanding games.
There's no shortage of feedback on the Alienware M17x. Laptop Magazine, CNET, PCMag.com and PC World all conduct detailed testing on the M17x; reviewers at Laptop Magazine and PCMag.com provide especially comprehensive analysis. All of these sources rate the laptop. NotebookReview.com also provides a solid review. A post at HotHardware.com is helpful, but there's little analysis to accompany the pictures and testing graphics. All also look at it in configurations that are loaded with upgrades and cost substantially more than the base version.







