Thursday, November 19, 2015

Omen hit 145 fps on Low at 1080p

Omen hit 145 fps on Low at 1080p
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Although I could see nearly every blade of grass at Very High settings, the game struggled to keep up with the rendering, stuttering along at 26 fps.
On the BioShock Infinite benchmark, the Omen hit 145 fps on Low at 1080p, crushing the 76-fps mainstream average. The MSI GS60 Ghost, which also has a 860M GPU, notched 91 fps at the same resolution. Equipped with Nvidia's GeForce GTX 870M GPU, the Maingear Pulse 15 and Razer Blade 14 scored 128 and 120 fps, respectively, at 1080p.
When pushed to Maximum settings, the Omen dropped to 42 fps with batetry such as dell Inspiron 1521 battery, Dell Inspiron 1720 battery, dell Inspiron 1525 battery, dell Inspiron 1526 battery, Dell JWPHF battery, Dell XPS L501X battery, dell Inspiron 1420 battery, dell WW116 battery, dell Vostro 1500 battery, dell Inspiron 1545 battery, dell J399N batterydell Inspiron 1440 battery. While that beats the 32-fps average and the Ghost (35 fps), the Pulse 15 and Blade 14 achieved a higher 54 fps and 51 fps, respectively.
During the GPU-taxing Metro: Last Light, the Omen delivered 66 fps on Low at 1080p, sailing past the 48-fps category average. While it easily toppled the Ghost's 53 fps, the Omen was no match for either the Pulse 15 or Blade 14, which hit 76 fps and 70 fps, respectively.
The Omen is also equipped with an Intel HD Graphics 4600 GPU for those moments when you're kicking back watching Netflix instead of hunting rhinos in Far Cry 4.
It might not have the ability to control rampaging rottweilers or ravens, but HP's Omen has some formidable power of its own via its 2.5-GHz Intel Core i7-4710HQ CPU and 16GB of RAM. Despite running a full system scan with 12 open tabs in Internet Explorer, Google Chrome and Firefox Mozilla, the laptop streamed The Wolf of Wall Street from Netflix without any hiccups.
During Geekbench 3, which measures overall performance, the Omen scored 12,687, trouncing the 8,289 mainstream average. The Razer Blade 14 and the MSI GS60 Ghost (2.2-GHz Intel Core i7-4702HQ) scored 11,497 and 12,695, respectively. The Maingear Pulse 15, which has the same CPU as the Omen, notched 13,073.
The Omen's 512GB SSD moved like greased lightning, posting 268 MBps on the File Transfer Test (copying 4.97GB of multimedia files). That showing matches that of the Pulse 15 (dual 128GB SSD with a 1TB, 7,200-rpm hard drive) and roasts the 108.4-MBps average. The Blade 14, with its dual 256GB SSD, came in at a distant second with 154.2 MBps, while the Ghost's 128GB mSATA SSD and 1TB, 7,200-rpm hard drive hit 91 MBps.
When tasked with pairing 20,000 names and addresses on the OpenOffice Spreadsheet test, the Omen completed the task in 3:53, easily outpacing the 5:36 average. The Pulse 15 was only a beat behind at 3:54, while Ghost and the Blade 14 clocked times of 4:00 and 4:15, respectively.
Although the Omen is slim and reasonably portable, it doesn't have a ton of staying power. The notebook lasted 4 hours and 6 minutes on the Laptop Mag Battery Test (continuous Web surfing over Wi-Fi at 100 nits of brightness).
That runtime is lower than those of both the MSI GS60 Ghost (4:53) and the Razer Blade 14 (5:19). But at least the Omen beat the Pulse's 3:39.
Unlike most gaming laptops, the Omen comes with a small cadre of software. HP-branded apps include Connected Photo, Connected Music Recovery Manager, Support Assistant and Performance Advisor, a workstation tool that helps identify processing bottlenecks to keep your laptop running smoothly.

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