HP has
HP OMEX MAX Gaming Laptop on sale for
$1,583.99 when you
follow the steps below.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
Suryasis for sharing this deal.
Steps:
- Visit the Configuration Page Here.
- Under Processor And Graphics select the following option:
- AMD Ryzen™ AI 9 HX 375 (up to 5.1 GHz, 24 MB L3 cache, 12 cores, 24 threads) + NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 5070 Ti Laptop GPU (12 GB)
- Your subtotal should be $1,979.99, Add to Cart.
- In your cart apply promo code LEVELUP20 for 20% Off.
- Your total will be $1,979.99 - 20% promo code LEVELUP20 = $1,583.99 with free shipping.
Specs:
- 16" 2560x1600 WQXGA 240Hz IPS Display, 500 nits
- AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 375 12-Core / 24-Thread Processor
- NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti 12GB Laptop Graphics
- 16GB (2x8GB) DDR5 5600MHz Memory
- 512GB M.2 PCIe NVMe Solid State Drive
- RGB Backlit Keyboard w/ Numpad, FHD webcam
- MediaTek Wi-Fi 6E MT7922 (2x2) and Bluetooth 5.3
- Windows 11 Home
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Top Comments
Thermals aren't the best. There are varying reports on these laptops ranging from perform without issue to thermal throttling heavily. May need a repaste and some tinkering if you're an unlucky one. Repasting may potentially void warranty.
Although there are two M.2 slots, you only have access to one. The other, which holds the OS, is located underneath the heatsink. As mentioned before, there are reports that removing the heatsink to access it may void warranty.
If you're okay with these two details, this laptop will perform near levels of a laptop with a 4080, which would go for $1800-$2000 last year. The only 4080 laptop that approached these prices were refurbished Acer Helios, which had their own compromises regarding cooling, apparently.
And regarding your concern about voiding the warranty for upgrading the SSD underneath the heatsink, let me clarify that for you. There is literally a law preventing those kind of behaviors or warranty warnings and provide users right to repair their device. After that was enforced, a lot of manufacturers like MSI, Acer etc. started removing those "Void If Opened" stickers or logos from their devices. In very simple words, manufacturers warranty can't be voided for just upgrading the device by yourself.
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Thermals aren't the best. There are varying reports on these laptops ranging from perform without issue to thermal throttling heavily. May need a repaste and some tinkering if you're an unlucky one. Repasting may potentially void warranty.
Although there are two M.2 slots, you only have access to one. The other, which holds the OS, is located underneath the heatsink. As mentioned before, there are reports that removing the heatsink to access it may void warranty.
If you're okay with these two details, this laptop will perform near levels of a laptop with a 4080, which would go for $1800-$2000 last year. The only 4080 laptop that approached these prices were refurbished Acer Helios, which had their own compromises regarding cooling, apparently.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Suryasis
And regarding your concern about voiding the warranty for upgrading the SSD underneath the heatsink, let me clarify that for you. There is literally a law preventing those kind of behaviors or warranty warnings and provide users right to repair their device. After that was enforced, a lot of manufacturers like MSI, Acer etc. started removing those "Void If Opened" stickers or logos from their devices. In very simple words, manufacturers warranty can't be voided for just upgrading the device by yourself.
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Correct
Thermals aren't the best. There are varying reports on these laptops ranging from perform without issue to thermal throttling heavily. May need a repaste and some tinkering if you're an unlucky one. Repasting may potentially void warranty.
Although there are two M.2 slots, you only have access to one. The other, which holds the OS, is located underneath the heatsink. As mentioned before, there are reports that removing the heatsink to access it may void warranty.
If you're okay with these two details, this laptop will perform near levels of a laptop with a 4080, which would go for $1800-$2000 last year. The only 4080 laptop that approached these prices were refurbished Acer Helios, which had their own compromises regarding cooling, apparently.
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Get a docking station
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