I'll be moving off to University soon, and suffice to say, circumstances require some level of mobility. With that in mind, I'm thinking of getting a gaming laptop, since it would not require me to haul a tower cross-country and because I'm thinking of staying pretty mobile in between lectures and actively gaming on it.
That said, I still want it to have good enough performance to out-do my current rig(i5 3470/8GB HyperX 1333Mhz/Zotac (reference) GTX 670) by at least a 5% percentile. Going on GPUboss and notebook review websites, laptops with a GTX 980m seem to do the trick fairly well.
Now, my dillemma stands in whether I should go for one of the finished MSI/Asus laptops that you can find all over amazon or ones where you get to select your components bit-by-bit(for eg, scan.co.uk's 3XS systems and PCSpecialist). The latter seems to offer the better value(since I can do without an SSD and just get one further down the line) but I don't know how well it gels together since well...as far as I know, no review site exists yet where they review all the possible component configurations from these sites.
So I'd like some advice on which option would be better. My budget is up to £1500, and some of PCSpecialist's range falls neatly within that margin(though Scan offers insurance, recovery sticks and next-day delivery).
That said, I still want it to have good enough performance to out-do my current rig(i5 3470/8GB HyperX 1333Mhz/Zotac (reference) GTX 670) by at least a 5% percentile. Going on GPUboss and notebook review websites, laptops with a GTX 980m seem to do the trick fairly well.
Now, my dillemma stands in whether I should go for one of the finished MSI/Asus laptops that you can find all over amazon or ones where you get to select your components bit-by-bit(for eg, scan.co.uk's 3XS systems and PCSpecialist). The latter seems to offer the better value(since I can do without an SSD and just get one further down the line) but I don't know how well it gels together since well...as far as I know, no review site exists yet where they review all the possible component configurations from these sites.
So I'd like some advice on which option would be better. My budget is up to £1500, and some of PCSpecialist's range falls neatly within that margin(though Scan offers insurance, recovery sticks and next-day delivery).