MSI GP62 Leopard Pro World of Tanks Edition Laptop Review
Peter Donnell / 7 years ago
Synthetic Benchmarks
3DMark Firestrike
The GP62 WoT Edition isn’t the most high-end system we’ve reviewed, especially so since we revised our testing methods. Still, this is a respectable score for this GPU and CPU combination, and about what we expected.
Unigine Superposition 1080p Extreme
Moving onto a GPU bound score, the system scored a respectable 1292. Obviously, that’s looking a bit slow compared to some other systems, but this is the first GTX 1050 Ti equipped notebook, and that is one of the more affordable mobile gaming GPUs on the market today.
PCMark 10
The CPU holds up really well, scoring a super healthy 4303. When it comes to day to day work and browsing, the GP62 is certainly no slouch.
WPrime 32M and 1024M
Again, we see a decent performance from this CPU, clocking a respectable 239.497. Sure, that’s no world record, but for a laptop of this spec, it’s pretty decent.
Cinebench R15
A video and 3D rendering system this is not, but that CPU does have enough grunt to set a good score. I wouldn’t be using it as my Premiere workbench anytime soon, but it’ll get the job done in a pinch.
Handbrake MP4 to MKV Conversion 4K
Another competitive score for Handbrake. Sure, not many are going to use a gaming notebook to transcode 4K video files, but it’ll get the job done if needed. Just be prepared for a noisy fan, as this is a very demanding workload for any system.