{"id":32404,"date":"2022-06-01T18:20:16","date_gmt":"2022-06-01T18:20:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/msi-announces-titan-gt77-with-4k-screen-and-250w-of-combined-power\/"},"modified":"2022-06-01T18:20:16","modified_gmt":"2022-06-01T18:20:16","slug":"msi-announces-titan-gt77-with-4k-screen-and-250w-of-combined-power","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/msi-announces-titan-gt77-with-4k-screen-and-250w-of-combined-power\/","title":{"rendered":"MSI announces Titan GT77 with 4K screen and 250W of combined power"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
MSI’s Titan used to be the company’s highest-performance gaming notebook, rivaled only by desktop-adjacent devices like Alienware’s Area-51m in terms of performance and power. Such devices, while impressive, are a fairly niche product, and the company hasn’t refreshed the Titan line in a few years.<\/p>\n
Today, at its MSIology press conference, the company announced that the Titan line is returning. It looks like the new Titan GT77 will be one of the most powerful gaming laptops you can buy this year (if not the most powerful one), including up to Intel’s desktop-class Core i9-12900HX and Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 3080 Ti, along with four slots for up to 128GB of DDR5-4800 RAM. The device will reach 250W of combined power delivery to the CPU and GPU using MSI’s OverBoost technology.<\/p>\n
250W is getting close to the point where we’d expect a device to require multiple power bricks. But the spec sheet I’m looking at indicates that the Titan GT77 only has one 330W adapter. That’s a bonus for the laptop’s portability – though, at 6.82 pounds, it’s heavier than anything I can imagine most people would want to carry places. (And in case it doesn’t go without saying, you shouldn’t buy this expecting it to have any kind of battery life.)<\/p>\n