OUR VERDICT

The MSI GT76 Titan gaming laptop has powerful performance with a desktop class processor, and a comfortable keyboard, but it’s also very expensive.

FOR

  • Bright 4K display
  • Comfortable keyboard
  • Easy upgrading

AGAINST

  • Very pricey
  • Poor webcam
  • Doesn’t hit 5GHz all-core claim

There are some laptops in the world that just seem like someone took a desktop and put a screen on it. That’s the category that the MSI GT76 Titan ($3,599 / £3,499 to start, $4,599 / £4,499 as tested) falls into. It’s a chonky desktop replacement laptop, with 11 heat pipes cooling a desktop Intel Core i9-9900K and Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080. It has a bright, 17-inch screen and boppin’ speakers, but you’ll pay a lot for the system, and the CPU can be tough to keep cool.

Design

The Titan is a behemoth of a notebook, a tank-like desktop replacement that looks powerful — even intimidating — whether it’s fired up and flashing, or switched off and closed. MSI had ditched its usual black-and-red design for a dark gray approach. The dark-gray aluminum lid has two diagonal lines on it, but is otherwise sparse aside from a silver version of the MSI logo. In fact, the lid looks much like Alienware’s designs up until 2018.

Behind the lid is an extended rear end with massive vents for cooling. The covering for that section is plastic, not aluminum.

When you lift the lid, the 17.3-inch 4K display is surrounded by narrow bezels. The metal deck has soft touch paint on it, which is comfortable for typing. Out of the box, the RGB keyboard is all rainbow.

Below the wrist rest, there’s an RGB light bar, which bounces light off of your desk, and two smaller light bars sit on either side of the notebook. Both the keyboard backlight and light bars can be adjusted in the included SteelSeries Engine 3 software.

I rarely talk about the bottom of the LAPTOP but this Titan has a mesh pattern that has plenty of little holes that let you see inside. It effectively looks like a giant dust filter from a desktop, but on the underside of a notebook.

There’s plenty of room for ports on the Titan, and MSI takes advantage of the space. On the left side sits the power jack (which uses a reversible port that connects to two 230-watt power bricks), an Ethernet port, Thunderbolt 3, two USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A ports and headphone and microphone jacks. On the right side, there’s a microSD card slot, another pair of USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A ports, a USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C port and, for video out, mini DisplayPort and HDMI.

Also, consider that the dual power bricks are (yes, there are two), add another 5.2 pounds to the Titan. So you’ll be carrying 14.4 pounds (6.5 kg) in total when you carry the GT76 Titan around.

Specifications

Display 17.3-inch, 4K (3840×2160), 60Hz, IPS-level
CPU Intel Core i9-9900K (desktop CPU)
Graphics Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080 (8GB GDDR6)
Memory 64GB DDR4-2666
SSD 2x 512GB SSD in RAID0
HDD 1TB, 7,200-rpm
Networking Ethernet port, Killer Wi-Fi 7 AX1650x, Bluetooth 5
Video Ports HDMI, Mini DisplayPort
USB Ports 4x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C, 1x Thunderbolt 3
Audio 2x 2W speakers, 1x 3W woofer
Camera 720p
Battery 90 WHr
Power Adapter 2x 230W
Operating System Windows 10 Pro
Dimensions (WxDxH) 15.6 x 13 x 1.7 inches / 397 x 330 x 42 mm
Weight 9.2 pounds / 4.2 kg
Price (as configured) $4,599 / £4,499

Gaming, Graphics and VR

MSI equipped the Titan with an Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080 with 8GB of GDDR6 memory, which is capable of playing most games at their highest settings, even some of them at 4K. When I played the Battlefield V mission “The Last Tiger” in 1080p on ultra settings including ultra ray tracing, it ran between 32 and 43 fps.

On Rise of the Tomb Raider (1080p, very high), the Titan played the game at 96 frames per second, well above the premium gaming laptop average (68 fps) and faster than the Predator (93 fps), but the Alienware ran at 103 fps. At 4K, the Titan ducked down to 28 fps, so you’d want to drop some settings down to get it to a playable frame rate.

On the Hitman benchmark (1080p, ultra), the Titan reached 113 fps, beating the average (105 fps) but falling behind the Triton (132 fps) and the Area-51m at a whopping 143 fps. At 4K it hit 70 fps.

When we turned to Grand Theft Auto V (1080p, very high), the Titan tied the Alienware at 105 fps, both of which surpassed the average (79 fps), but were a single frame behind the Predator. At 4K the benchmark ran at 34 fps.

The Titan sailed passed the 92-fps average on the Middle-earth: Shadow of War benchmark at 110 fps, though both the Alienware and Predator were faster.

To stress test the Titan, I ran the Metro Exodus benchmark 15 times on RTX settings, simulating approximately half and hour of gaming. During the test, the Titan ran the game at an average of 57.9 frames per second. The first run went by at 59.9 fps, but then it slowly dropped to 58 and sometimes lower, ending at 58.5 fps.

During the stress test, the CPU ran at an average clock speed of 4.5 GHz, not quite matching the 5 GHz max boost clock the Intel Core i9-9900K allows or that MSI promises (and all-core, at that). The average CPU temperature was 73.8 degrees Celsius (164.8 degrees Fahrenheit).

The GPU’s average clock speed was 1.5 GHz and its average temperature was 82.3 degrees Celsius (180.1 degrees Fahrenheit).

Productivity Performance

The GT76 packs a desktop-class Intel Core i9-9900K, providing a ton of power in a laptop form factor–albeit a big and heavy one.

On Geekbench 4.1, it earned a score of 31,267, just behind the Alienware Area-51m with the same processor. The premium gaming average is 23,228 and the Predator notched a score of 24,749.

It took the Titan 4 seconds to copy 4.97GB of files, a rate of 1,272.3 MBps. That’s the same as the Alienware, and high above the 848.2 MBps of the Predator and the 769.7 MBps average.

The Titan took 5 minutes and 51 seconds to complete our Handbrake test, in which the laptop converts a 4K video to 1080p. The average is 9:36. The Alienware took 6 minutes and the Predator was behind at 9:55.

Display

The 17.3-inch, 4K screen on the Titan gets brighter than many other gaming notebooks. The fire from a rocket launching at the beginning of the 4K open source film Tears of Steel was nearly a blinding white. And even darker content, like a scene in which a sniper looks off a building during a stormy night, were bright and clear on the screen. When I played Battlefield V, fires on exploding tanks were a bright orange.

MSI’s screen covers 157 percent of the sRGB color gamut, beating the premium laptop category average (147 percent) and the Alienware but falling a tad behind the Predator.

The Titan’s screen measured an average of 376 nits of brightness, surpassing the average of 294, as well as the Predator and the Alienware.

MSI refers to its display as IPS-level, but the term “IPS” is typically tied to LG panels. This screen is from AUO, so IPS-level is its way of referring to its performance relative to those panels.

Keyboard and Touchpad

The Steelseries keyboards on MSI laptops continue to be some of my favorites, and the one on the Titan is no exception. The keys are bouncy and clicky, making them comfortable with a deep 1.7 mm of travel with 70 grams of actuation force. On the 10fastfingers.com typing test, I hit 109 words per minute with my usual 2% error rate.

This is, however a slight step back from previous Titans, like the GT75, which had mechanical keyboards.

The 4.2 x 2.3-inch touchpad uses Windows 10 Precision drivers, which all Windows laptops should. Every gesture worked on the first try and the touchpad is smooth and comfortable to navigate with.

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