Metabox P950EP Gaming Laptop Review and Benchmarks

**Gaming Laptop Review: Meta Box P 950 AP**

The Meta Box P 950 AP gaming laptop has been put through its paces to test its performance, battery life, and overall value for money. In this review, we'll dive into the details of our testing, including benchmarks, frame rates, and power consumption.

**Benchmarking Results**

We started by running a series of benchmark tests to assess the laptop's performance. The first test was on "Crysis 3" using the built-in benchmark tool. The results showed that the laptop ran well at all setting levels, with high averages and low 1% lows, even at Ultra settings. This suggests that the laptop can handle demanding games at high resolutions without significant frame rate drops.

We also tested other popular games such as "CS:GO", "Far Cry 5", "Assassin's Creed Origins", "Dota 2", "Rainbow Six Siege", and "Battlefield 1" using the built-in benchmark tool. The results were impressive, with all games running smoothly at high settings or below.

**Benchmarking with Replays**

To get a more realistic idea of the laptop's performance, we ran some replay tests on popular games like "PUBG". We found that the results varied depending on the game and other players' actions, but even in the worst-case scenario, the frame rates were still respectable.

**Nvidia 1060 Performance**

We also tested the Nvidia 1060 graphics card using Unigine's Heaven Valley benchmark. The results showed that the laptop was still able to achieve high frame rates at 1080p, with an average of over 60 FPS. This is a great performance for a gaming laptop in this class.

**VR and High Refresh Rate**

We also tested some VR games like "Fire Strike: Time Spy" and "3D Mark's Virtual Reality Mock". The results were impressive, with high frame rates even at Ultra settings.

**Upgrade Options**

For those looking to upgrade their graphics card, we found that the Nvidia 1060 was still a great option for gaming at 1080p. However, if you need more graphical power or want to reach higher refresh rates, consider upgrading to a more powerful GPU like the Nvidia 1070 Max Q.

**CPU Performance**

We also ran some CPU benchmarks using Cinebench R15 to assess the laptop's processor performance. The results showed that the new 8th gen Core i7-8750H chip was a decent step up from the 7th generation, with two extra cores and slightly faster single-threaded clock speeds.

However, we did notice some throttling taking place in CPU-only workloads, which may be an issue for those who plan to use their laptop for more demanding tasks like video editing or 3D modeling.

**Storage Performance**

We tested the laptop's storage performance using Crystal Disk Mark, and were impressed with the results. The 512GB M.2 SSD was able to achieve sequential reads of around 550MB/s and writes of around 460MB/s.

However, we did notice that the SD slot only supports V90-rated cards, which may be a limitation for those who want to use faster storage options.

**Battery Life**

Unfortunately, our testing didn't reveal any information about battery life, as this was not part of our benchmarking tests.

**Conclusion and Verdict**

Overall, we found the Meta Box P 950 AP gaming laptop to offer good value for money, especially considering its thin and light form factor. However, it did appear to result in some drawbacks, such as CPU throttling.

While this may be a limitation for those who plan to use their laptop for more demanding tasks, it shouldn't affect most gamers who just want to play high-quality games at 1080p.

The laptop's performance was impressive, with high frame rates and low latency even at Ultra settings. And with the Nvidia 1060 graphics card and powerful processor, this laptop is well-suited for gaming on-the-go.

For those looking for a good value gaming laptop in Australia, we would recommend checking out the Meta Box P 950 AP. However, if you need more graphical power or want to reach higher refresh rates, consider upgrading your GPU or looking at other laptops with similar specs.

"WEBVTTKind: captionsLanguage: enthe P 950 EP is a new laptop with 8th gen Intel CPU and nvidia 1060 graphics from meta box an australian company who specialize in custom laptops so let's find out what one of their newest models has to offer as you can customize the hardware when ordering i'll first cover the specs of my unit for the cpu we've got intel's i 78758 6 core cpu which can turbo up to 4 point 1 gigahertz in symbol call workloads or 3.9 gigahertz in all core workloads the 16 gig of ddr4 memory running at 2400 megahertz in dual channel but the two slots support up to 32 gig at 2600 66 megahertz for storage there's a single m2 slope which supports nvme pcie-based storage in my case it's populated with a 512 gig end up to sutter SSD there's a single 2.5 inch drive bay which is empty here but you've got the option to add mesosphere your hard drive for the graphics as an nvidia 1066 gig which powers the 15.6 inch 1080p 60 hertz IPS panel but it's also available with 120 Hertz 144 Hertz or 4k options and we'll see how this performs soon in the benchmarks finally for the network connectivity there's a Gigabit Ethernet port support for ADA 2.11 AC Wi-Fi as well as Bluetooth version 5 but the Wi-Fi card can also be customized the interior lid and base of the laptop or an aluminium alloy so it feels quite sturdy and they've all got the same silver grey matte color the dimensions of the laptop are 38 centimeters in width 25 point two centimeters in depth and 1.86 centimeters in height so it's on the thinnest ID for a laptop with these specs the bare-bones weight of the laptop is listed as 1.9 kilos with the battery included so total weight will depend on the selected components I found mine to weigh around two point one kilos and when we add the 150 watt power brick and cable for charging the weight increases to just under two point eight kilos so still pretty portable as mentioned the screen here is a 15.6 inch 60 Hertz 1080p IPS panel no g-sync available either the viewing angles were good still perfectly clear on all angles with the IPS panel the panel doesn't get too bright but it's enough for insight use at up to two hundred and seventy eight minutes one hundred percent brightness i've also measured the current color gamut using the spider v pro and my results returned 61% of srgb forty-four percent of ntsc and 46 percent of adobe RGB so nothing special definitely find for gaming and office use but for professional content creation you might want to look at a different panel i've performed my usual backlight bleed test on the display which involves having the laptop show a black screen in a dark room to help emphasize any bleeding i then take a long exposure photo to display t bleed so this is a moist case scenario test it looked pretty good to my own eyes only the bottom bit was visible to me on certain angles however this will of course vary between laptops and all of these things mentioned with regards to the panel will be completely different if you upgrade to the 120 hertz 144 hertz or 4k panels the screen was quite sturdy while flexing it thanks to the metallic lid which had its hinges out towards the far corners it can be opened up quite easily with one finger demonstrating a fairly even weight distribution above the display in the center is a 1080p camera it looks pretty good for a laptop camera way better than most of the other laptops i've tested the microphone also sounds much better than most others - but you'll be able to judge both for yourself the keyboard has RGB backlighting and can be controlled in three separate zones the sides of the keys are clear which allows more light to shine through and there are a few different effects available through the control panel software overall I really liked typing with the keyboard to me it just felt nice to type with no problems at all here's how the keys sound to try and give you a little sample of what to expect there was a little keyboard flex but I think that's just because you need to remove the keyboard to take the bottom panel off the body itself felt quite solid the touchpad worked well it's got a smooth texture with two physically separated left and right click buttons with a fingerprint scanner in the top left corner moving on to the i/o on the left that's the power input HDMI port two mini DisplayPort 1.3 outputs two USB 3.1 gen2 type-c ports no mention of thunderbolt support and two USB 3.1 gen2 on type II ports the lust of which is powered on the right there are separate 3.5 millimeter microphone and headphone jacks a third USB 3.1 gen2 on type a port SD card slot Gigabit Ethernet port and Kensington look the front just has some status LEDs - what's the left-hand side while the back has some events up on the lid this the meta box logo in white in the Sun top and the pattern just above it lights up white while it's powered on I couldn't find a way of turning it off fingerprints show up fairly easily on both lid and matte interior although as a smooth surface I had no problems with cleaning underneath there's heaps of vents for air intake as well as some rubber feet that did a pretty good job of preventing the laptop from sliding around while in use the bottom panel can be removed using a Phillips head screwdriver and there are some additional screws underneath the keyboard that also need to be removed so it's not difficult just an extra step just be careful of the ribbon cables attached to the keyboard when opening it up inside we get access to the single m2 slot Wi-Fi card to memory slots and 2.5 inch drive bay the two speakers are found just below the screen they sound a bit tinny with no bass I'd stick to headphones where possible powering the laptop is a four cell 55 watt hour battery and with a full charge and just watching YouTube videos with the screen on half brightness keep on lighting off and background apps disabled I was able to use it for 4 hours and 12 minutes not bad the Intel integrated graphics were in use during this test thanks to Nvidia Optimus while playing The Witcher 3 with medium settings and invidious battery boost set to 30fps the battery lasted for 53 minutes and was able to sustain 30 fps the entire time many others I've tested aren't able to do that and drop frame rate overall the battery life was pretty good more than I expected considering the specs and somewhat thin in light form factor thermal testing was completed with an ambient room temperature of 18 degrees Celsius it's cold here is it's winter in Australia so expect warmer temperatures in a warmer environment it's also worth keeping in mind that as the CPU and GPU share heat pipes a change in one component may affect the other at idle both the CPU and GPU weren't too warm as shown in light blue 46 and 38 degrees Celsius respectively with the default fan speeds while playing pub G at high settings the temperatures rise as shown in the darker blue just above if we apply a minus 0.14 volt under volt to the CPU the temperatures drop back a bit as shown in green and we'll see how this affected clock speeds in the next graph with no one to volt then just maxing out the fans in yellow we still see a little improvement over stock fans when combining the CPU under fault and maxed out fans we see the best temperatures in orange the full load stress test was tested with a 264 and the heav'n benchmark running at the same time and some thermal throttling was present it was possible to slightly improve the temperatures a bit with the under multiplied although max fans don't seem to make much difference here on the CPU in comparison these are the average clock speeds while running the same tests for the temperatures just shown it wasn't possible to reach the full 3.9 gigahertz all core turbo speed in any of these tests due to thermal throttling the under vault does help with this significantly they're much more than increasing the fan speed these are the clock speeds I got while just rang CPU only stress tests without any GPU load although the undervolt did improve performance a bit we're still not able to reach the full 3.9 gigahertz on all six cores as for the external temperatures where you'll actually be putting your hands at idle the body of the laptop is sitting in the low 30s while gaming this increases to the mid 40s in the center but is warmest on the far left where the heat exhausts getting into the mid 50s the results were pretty similar with the CPU and GPU stress tests running and with the fans maxed out and CPU under vaulting applied the temperatures just dropped slightly it wasn't too bad for the most part while actually using the keyboard but you'll want to avoid touching the part on the left as for the fan noise produced by the laptop well you ever was to some of these tests at idle that was only just audible and while gaming it was a little lower than many other 1060 laptops I've tested the stress test was very similar to gaming and when we maxed the fans out it gets about three decibels louder I'll also note that I didn't hear any coal whine in my unit finally let's take a look at some benchmarks will first cover some real world gaming benchmarks followed by tests with various benchmarking tools all tests will run at 1080p with the latest Nvidia drivers and Windows updates to date installed fortnight ran perfectly fine even in epic settings however the results greatly depend on where you are in the game and what other players are doing so take these with a grain of salt overwatch was tested playing with the bots and again even in epic settings have played great but again the results will vary based on what's going on in the game and the particular map for example sub G was tested using the replay feature and I found it to run quite well at all setting levels although like the previous two games results will vary based on what other players are doing csgo was running well in this benchmark really high averages as expected and even the 1% lowers with low settings are at 60fps I've tested Far Cry 5 with the built-in benchmark and the results of dayson over 60 FPS average is even at Ultra settings Assassin's Creed origins was also tested with the built-in benchmark and again decent results and still playable at highest setting levels dota 2 was tested using a fairly intensive replays so this should be a worst case scenario you'll get better results than this while actually playing and even in this intensive test the results are pretty good so no worries at all playing this game Rainbow six siege was tested with the built-in benchmark and no issues at all here even at Ultra settings the 1% lows are above the refresh rate of the panel so it should go great battlefield 1 was tested during the first campaign mission and even at Ultra settings are played well and felt smooth no issues here Ghost Recon is a fairly resource intensive game and was tested with the built-in benchmark it should work pretty well with around high settings or blur watchdogs 2 is another resource intensive game although I don't really think it meets a high frame rate to play it was definitely playable at Ultra settings but I think high Aloha gave the best experience The Witcher 3 also doesn't really need a high frame rate to play but it played really well at high settings or below doom was test using Vulcan and it played great even at Ultra settings as shown by the fairly high average frame rates now on to the benchmarking tools I've tested Heaven Valley and super position from Unigine as well as fire strike time spy and VR mock from 3d mark just pause the video if you want a detailed look at these results the results in these tests are quite good the Nvidia 1060 is still a great choice for 1080p gaming at 60 fps in high settings and many games you could optionally look at upgrading to the 120 Hertz or 144 Hertz panel if your games are able to reach these frame rates otherwise if you need more graphical power check out the P 950 er model which has the nvidia 1070 max q graphics as for overclocking the 8750 hcp you can't be overclocked but I've applied a 200 megahertz overclock to the 1060 and these are the actual GPU clock speeds we go with the heaven benchmark running at default and with the overclock applied with both CPU under faulting and GPU overclocking applied we see a nice little boost in games I've retested pub G and we're getting over a 9% performance increase on average but this will vary between games I've got some Cinebench CPU benchmarks here and we can see that the new 8th gen coffee leak chip is a decent step up from the 7th generation as we've got two extra cores with slightly faster single-threaded clock speeds and we can see there's a nice boost with the under multiplier although as discussed earlier there was still throttling taking place in a CPU only workload the 87 58 should be able to score above 1200 with no limitations in place in crystal disk mark the 512 gig M dr. solder SSD was getting around 550 megabytes per second and sequential reads and 460 megabytes per second on the writes but it's worth remembering you can select different drives including in VM AE which will change these fades I've tested the SD slot with a V 90 rated card so the card itself shouldn't be a bottleneck and I think these are the best results I've ever seen really impressive as for the price at the time of recording it starts at 1800 Australian dollars but this will of course vary depending on the customizations that you make here in Australia it's a bit cheaper compared to other laptops with similar specs like the ASA Helios 300 or Dell g5 for instance so what did you guys think of the P 950 AP gaming laptop from meta box for the price it's definitely offering good value here in Australia especially considering the thin and light form factor however this does appear to result in a drawback namely that I wasn't able to make full use of a 758 CPU juda throttling as discussed earlier this could be improved with under vaulting and even without that the gaming results was still pretty decent let me know what you guys slow it down in the comments and leave a like to let me know if you found the review useful thanks for watching and don't forget to subscribe for future tech videos like this onethe P 950 EP is a new laptop with 8th gen Intel CPU and nvidia 1060 graphics from meta box an australian company who specialize in custom laptops so let's find out what one of their newest models has to offer as you can customize the hardware when ordering i'll first cover the specs of my unit for the cpu we've got intel's i 78758 6 core cpu which can turbo up to 4 point 1 gigahertz in symbol call workloads or 3.9 gigahertz in all core workloads the 16 gig of ddr4 memory running at 2400 megahertz in dual channel but the two slots support up to 32 gig at 2600 66 megahertz for storage there's a single m2 slope which supports nvme pcie-based storage in my case it's populated with a 512 gig end up to sutter SSD there's a single 2.5 inch drive bay which is empty here but you've got the option to add mesosphere your hard drive for the graphics as an nvidia 1066 gig which powers the 15.6 inch 1080p 60 hertz IPS panel but it's also available with 120 Hertz 144 Hertz or 4k options and we'll see how this performs soon in the benchmarks finally for the network connectivity there's a Gigabit Ethernet port support for ADA 2.11 AC Wi-Fi as well as Bluetooth version 5 but the Wi-Fi card can also be customized the interior lid and base of the laptop or an aluminium alloy so it feels quite sturdy and they've all got the same silver grey matte color the dimensions of the laptop are 38 centimeters in width 25 point two centimeters in depth and 1.86 centimeters in height so it's on the thinnest ID for a laptop with these specs the bare-bones weight of the laptop is listed as 1.9 kilos with the battery included so total weight will depend on the selected components I found mine to weigh around two point one kilos and when we add the 150 watt power brick and cable for charging the weight increases to just under two point eight kilos so still pretty portable as mentioned the screen here is a 15.6 inch 60 Hertz 1080p IPS panel no g-sync available either the viewing angles were good still perfectly clear on all angles with the IPS panel the panel doesn't get too bright but it's enough for insight use at up to two hundred and seventy eight minutes one hundred percent brightness i've also measured the current color gamut using the spider v pro and my results returned 61% of srgb forty-four percent of ntsc and 46 percent of adobe RGB so nothing special definitely find for gaming and office use but for professional content creation you might want to look at a different panel i've performed my usual backlight bleed test on the display which involves having the laptop show a black screen in a dark room to help emphasize any bleeding i then take a long exposure photo to display t bleed so this is a moist case scenario test it looked pretty good to my own eyes only the bottom bit was visible to me on certain angles however this will of course vary between laptops and all of these things mentioned with regards to the panel will be completely different if you upgrade to the 120 hertz 144 hertz or 4k panels the screen was quite sturdy while flexing it thanks to the metallic lid which had its hinges out towards the far corners it can be opened up quite easily with one finger demonstrating a fairly even weight distribution above the display in the center is a 1080p camera it looks pretty good for a laptop camera way better than most of the other laptops i've tested the microphone also sounds much better than most others - but you'll be able to judge both for yourself the keyboard has RGB backlighting and can be controlled in three separate zones the sides of the keys are clear which allows more light to shine through and there are a few different effects available through the control panel software overall I really liked typing with the keyboard to me it just felt nice to type with no problems at all here's how the keys sound to try and give you a little sample of what to expect there was a little keyboard flex but I think that's just because you need to remove the keyboard to take the bottom panel off the body itself felt quite solid the touchpad worked well it's got a smooth texture with two physically separated left and right click buttons with a fingerprint scanner in the top left corner moving on to the i/o on the left that's the power input HDMI port two mini DisplayPort 1.3 outputs two USB 3.1 gen2 type-c ports no mention of thunderbolt support and two USB 3.1 gen2 on type II ports the lust of which is powered on the right there are separate 3.5 millimeter microphone and headphone jacks a third USB 3.1 gen2 on type a port SD card slot Gigabit Ethernet port and Kensington look the front just has some status LEDs - what's the left-hand side while the back has some events up on the lid this the meta box logo in white in the Sun top and the pattern just above it lights up white while it's powered on I couldn't find a way of turning it off fingerprints show up fairly easily on both lid and matte interior although as a smooth surface I had no problems with cleaning underneath there's heaps of vents for air intake as well as some rubber feet that did a pretty good job of preventing the laptop from sliding around while in use the bottom panel can be removed using a Phillips head screwdriver and there are some additional screws underneath the keyboard that also need to be removed so it's not difficult just an extra step just be careful of the ribbon cables attached to the keyboard when opening it up inside we get access to the single m2 slot Wi-Fi card to memory slots and 2.5 inch drive bay the two speakers are found just below the screen they sound a bit tinny with no bass I'd stick to headphones where possible powering the laptop is a four cell 55 watt hour battery and with a full charge and just watching YouTube videos with the screen on half brightness keep on lighting off and background apps disabled I was able to use it for 4 hours and 12 minutes not bad the Intel integrated graphics were in use during this test thanks to Nvidia Optimus while playing The Witcher 3 with medium settings and invidious battery boost set to 30fps the battery lasted for 53 minutes and was able to sustain 30 fps the entire time many others I've tested aren't able to do that and drop frame rate overall the battery life was pretty good more than I expected considering the specs and somewhat thin in light form factor thermal testing was completed with an ambient room temperature of 18 degrees Celsius it's cold here is it's winter in Australia so expect warmer temperatures in a warmer environment it's also worth keeping in mind that as the CPU and GPU share heat pipes a change in one component may affect the other at idle both the CPU and GPU weren't too warm as shown in light blue 46 and 38 degrees Celsius respectively with the default fan speeds while playing pub G at high settings the temperatures rise as shown in the darker blue just above if we apply a minus 0.14 volt under volt to the CPU the temperatures drop back a bit as shown in green and we'll see how this affected clock speeds in the next graph with no one to volt then just maxing out the fans in yellow we still see a little improvement over stock fans when combining the CPU under fault and maxed out fans we see the best temperatures in orange the full load stress test was tested with a 264 and the heav'n benchmark running at the same time and some thermal throttling was present it was possible to slightly improve the temperatures a bit with the under multiplied although max fans don't seem to make much difference here on the CPU in comparison these are the average clock speeds while running the same tests for the temperatures just shown it wasn't possible to reach the full 3.9 gigahertz all core turbo speed in any of these tests due to thermal throttling the under vault does help with this significantly they're much more than increasing the fan speed these are the clock speeds I got while just rang CPU only stress tests without any GPU load although the undervolt did improve performance a bit we're still not able to reach the full 3.9 gigahertz on all six cores as for the external temperatures where you'll actually be putting your hands at idle the body of the laptop is sitting in the low 30s while gaming this increases to the mid 40s in the center but is warmest on the far left where the heat exhausts getting into the mid 50s the results were pretty similar with the CPU and GPU stress tests running and with the fans maxed out and CPU under vaulting applied the temperatures just dropped slightly it wasn't too bad for the most part while actually using the keyboard but you'll want to avoid touching the part on the left as for the fan noise produced by the laptop well you ever was to some of these tests at idle that was only just audible and while gaming it was a little lower than many other 1060 laptops I've tested the stress test was very similar to gaming and when we maxed the fans out it gets about three decibels louder I'll also note that I didn't hear any coal whine in my unit finally let's take a look at some benchmarks will first cover some real world gaming benchmarks followed by tests with various benchmarking tools all tests will run at 1080p with the latest Nvidia drivers and Windows updates to date installed fortnight ran perfectly fine even in epic settings however the results greatly depend on where you are in the game and what other players are doing so take these with a grain of salt overwatch was tested playing with the bots and again even in epic settings have played great but again the results will vary based on what's going on in the game and the particular map for example sub G was tested using the replay feature and I found it to run quite well at all setting levels although like the previous two games results will vary based on what other players are doing csgo was running well in this benchmark really high averages as expected and even the 1% lowers with low settings are at 60fps I've tested Far Cry 5 with the built-in benchmark and the results of dayson over 60 FPS average is even at Ultra settings Assassin's Creed origins was also tested with the built-in benchmark and again decent results and still playable at highest setting levels dota 2 was tested using a fairly intensive replays so this should be a worst case scenario you'll get better results than this while actually playing and even in this intensive test the results are pretty good so no worries at all playing this game Rainbow six siege was tested with the built-in benchmark and no issues at all here even at Ultra settings the 1% lows are above the refresh rate of the panel so it should go great battlefield 1 was tested during the first campaign mission and even at Ultra settings are played well and felt smooth no issues here Ghost Recon is a fairly resource intensive game and was tested with the built-in benchmark it should work pretty well with around high settings or blur watchdogs 2 is another resource intensive game although I don't really think it meets a high frame rate to play it was definitely playable at Ultra settings but I think high Aloha gave the best experience The Witcher 3 also doesn't really need a high frame rate to play but it played really well at high settings or below doom was test using Vulcan and it played great even at Ultra settings as shown by the fairly high average frame rates now on to the benchmarking tools I've tested Heaven Valley and super position from Unigine as well as fire strike time spy and VR mock from 3d mark just pause the video if you want a detailed look at these results the results in these tests are quite good the Nvidia 1060 is still a great choice for 1080p gaming at 60 fps in high settings and many games you could optionally look at upgrading to the 120 Hertz or 144 Hertz panel if your games are able to reach these frame rates otherwise if you need more graphical power check out the P 950 er model which has the nvidia 1070 max q graphics as for overclocking the 8750 hcp you can't be overclocked but I've applied a 200 megahertz overclock to the 1060 and these are the actual GPU clock speeds we go with the heaven benchmark running at default and with the overclock applied with both CPU under faulting and GPU overclocking applied we see a nice little boost in games I've retested pub G and we're getting over a 9% performance increase on average but this will vary between games I've got some Cinebench CPU benchmarks here and we can see that the new 8th gen coffee leak chip is a decent step up from the 7th generation as we've got two extra cores with slightly faster single-threaded clock speeds and we can see there's a nice boost with the under multiplier although as discussed earlier there was still throttling taking place in a CPU only workload the 87 58 should be able to score above 1200 with no limitations in place in crystal disk mark the 512 gig M dr. solder SSD was getting around 550 megabytes per second and sequential reads and 460 megabytes per second on the writes but it's worth remembering you can select different drives including in VM AE which will change these fades I've tested the SD slot with a V 90 rated card so the card itself shouldn't be a bottleneck and I think these are the best results I've ever seen really impressive as for the price at the time of recording it starts at 1800 Australian dollars but this will of course vary depending on the customizations that you make here in Australia it's a bit cheaper compared to other laptops with similar specs like the ASA Helios 300 or Dell g5 for instance so what did you guys think of the P 950 AP gaming laptop from meta box for the price it's definitely offering good value here in Australia especially considering the thin and light form factor however this does appear to result in a drawback namely that I wasn't able to make full use of a 758 CPU juda throttling as discussed earlier this could be improved with under vaulting and even without that the gaming results was still pretty decent let me know what you guys slow it down in the comments and leave a like to let me know if you found the review useful thanks for watching and don't forget to subscribe for future tech videos like this one\n"