• On CHOW: Sexy vampire party
This is not phishing, this is art!
Read more here what this is about.
November 19, 2009 10:46 AM PST

Hands-on with the Asus 3D laptop

by Dan Ackerman
and Scott Stein
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 2 comments

Scott playing Left 4 Dead 2 on the Asus 3D laptop.(Credit: Dan Ackerman/CNET)

Earlier this week, Asus unveiled a 15-inch laptop with Nvidia's 3D Vision technology built in. The $1,699 Asus G51J 3D has a 120Hz LCD panel, an Intel Core i7 CPU, and a high-end Nvidia GeForce GTX 260M GPU, and comes bundled with a pair of Nvidia's active glasses and the USB-powered IR emitter required to make the glasses work.

We've just had a chance to take the system for a test drive, and came away largely impressed with the results, especially compared with Acer's Aspire 5738DG, a 3D laptop that uses a pair of passive polarized glasses and a special screen coating to create a 3D effect.

That Acer model was unfortunately underpowered for gaming, especially with the added overhead of running its 3D software in the background. The Asus G51J, on the other hand, with a high-end processor and video card, seemed well-suited for mid-to-high-end gaming. Of course, it lacked dual SLI video cards and the 1,366x768 15-inch display is no match for some of the nicer 17-inch 1080p displays we've seen.

The Asus G51J with Nvidia's 3D glasses and IR emitter. (Credit: Dan Ackerman/CNET)

While playing Left 4 Dead 2, the 3D effects appeared crisp and appealing, and didn't seem to distract from the speed of gameplay or the screen brightness. There appeared to be no real hardware burden in generating the 3D in terms of frame rate or graphics detail, either. On the other hand, the 15-inch screen is a little small as compared to a nice big gaming monitor, and that mitigated the overall immersion of the 3D effects.

The bigger problem is that 3D gaming is still a novelty. It's not actually needed to appreciate any game at this point, and it has an expensive and often clunky set-up for users to navigate through.

Many people haven't even seen 3D of the caliber that Nvidia is currently offering, and so they have no idea how smooth and crisp it is compared to the fuzzy double-vision experience of years past. What's particularly great about Asus' solution is that it's already integrated into a reasonably priced Core i7 gaming laptop, so the set-up and research into compatible hardware components is almost entirely eliminated.

This is an interesting trend to watch for in gaming laptops, and it should be included in more Core i7 laptops aimed at gamers, especially if Nvidia is serious about getting a larger adoption. We expect to see more 3D Vision capable laptops from major PC makers by early next year.

The following products mentioned are available.

On Sale Now: $749.00 - $804.67
View the latest prices for Acer Aspire 5738DG-6165

On Sale Now: $1,438.00 - $1,499.99
View the latest prices for Asus G51J-A1

Recent posts from Crave
Palm Pixi now just $25 at Amazon, Wal-Mart
This week in Crave: The Black Saturday edition
U.S. Mazda2 launching at Los Angeles Auto Show
Seize Seesmic Twitter app on BlackBerry, Android
T-Mobile holiday gift: Aggressive unlimited prepaid plans
U.S. Cellular adds overage protection service
Holiday gaming on the cheap
The Droid and hands-free voice dialing
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by markcusdd November 19, 2009 4:00 PM PST
I have a desktop setup with 3D Vision and I love it. It really adds an extra level of immersion to the games I've played. Everything just looks solid and has real depth. Unfortunately it's something that you need to see for yourself. Try the Avatar demo with 3D Vision if you haven't, it's amazing.
Reply to this comment
by markcusdd November 19, 2009 4:00 PM PST
I have a desktop setup with 3D Vision and I love it. It really adds an extra level of immersion to the games I've played. Everything just looks solid and has real depth. Unfortunately it's something that you need to see for yourself. Try the Avatar demo with 3D Vision if you haven't, it's amazing.
Reply to this comment

About Crave

The name says it all. Crave is our blog about gorgeous gadgets and other crushworthy stuff. If you would like to contact Crave with a tip or comment, please write to: crave@cnet.com

Add this feed to your online news reader

Crave topics

The 411 on early-termination fees

Verizon Wireless has doubled its early-termination fees for smartphones, but what does it mean for the rest of the industry?

Google has its own plan for Netbooks

No, the search giant isn't saying it will build a Netbook. But it sure knows what it would like one running Chrome OS to resemble, and that's a little different from the Netbook of today.
• Screenshot tour of Chrome OS