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It’s easy to get into a hobby, especially if you’re a fan of computer games and dream of the highest levels of graphical performance. But how much is too much for hardware? Spending too much on graphics power, processing, RAM, storage, etc. – like many things – eventually leads to diminishing returns. When it comes to gaming laptops, the $5,699.99 MSI Titan 18 goes well beyond that inflection point. But it’s also unlike anything else.
It doesn’t make sense to spend that kind of money when other gaming laptops are almost as powerful but cost almost half as much. While purchasing a Titan is completely impulsive, it’s also a fun one to do as much as it can for the sake of specs and ample coolness factor.
$4800
The Titan does its best in almost everything, though the execution is a mixed bag. The 18-inch Mini LED 4K HDR display has a resolution of 3840 x 2400 and a variable refresh rate of up to 120Hz. It looks great. It’s not as contrasting as OLED, but it has a color punch with enough brightness to be easily visible even in a sunny room. SteelSeries made its mechanical keyboard with low-profile Cherry switches, one of the most tactile and smartest switches around. Loudest voice Laptop keyboards you’ve touched before. It has a metallic ping-y tone in its key presses, which I don’t normally want in a mechanical keyboard, but for some reason I like it in the Titan.
The smooth trackpad is lit edge-to-edge by customizable RGB lighting instead of being invisible like on the Dell, and its tactile feedback has a satisfyingly solid thump like no other. But like Dell XPS 13 I tested it earlier this year, and it’s not the most reliable at detecting finger taps. Combined with the reliability of the MacBook’s trackpad, this feedback would be my favorite ever. The Titan is also packed with ports and expandability, including two ultra-fast Thunderbolt 5 ports, three USB-A ports, two user-accessible RAM slots, and four M.2 SSD slots. Beat the Titan’s specs with the laptop’s top-tier Nvidia RTX 5090 GPU, Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX CPU, 64GB of RAM, and 6TB SSD storage, and the hefty $5,700 price tag starts to make more sense.
The Titan 18 makes no apologies for its status as a desktop replacement. It’s 7.94 lbs / 3.6 kg “I’ve got my nose up to sitting in one place and crushing AAA games or performing heavy processing tasks, so this is what I’ll do.” And with the massive 400W power adapter, the entire package weighs 10.5 lbs / 4.76 kg. I carried it with me on a road trip, and having a machine this powerful when visiting family was great — even if it wasn’t very fun to travel with, since it didn’t fit in any of my bags. Although it’s easier than moving an entire desktop computer and monitor, you’ll still feel connected to a wall outlet. The Titan’s 99Wh battery barely gets through 2.5 hours of use of Chrome, Slack, Google Docs, and basic chat apps before it dies — and that’s in Eco mode with Windows Energy Saver running the whole time. While playing a game on battery, even with Nvidia’s BatteryBoost optimizations enabled and targeting just 30fps, it died in about an hour or less.
But when you’re plugged in and on the move in a visually demanding game, the Titan is fun to use. can play Cyberpunk 2077 At 4K Ultra settings with ray tracing and DLSS 4 running at around 60fps (or higher with frame generation). Turn off ray tracing or lower some settings, and you can comfortably play at over 60 fps. Early levels of Battlefield 6 The campaign ran confidently at 60-75fps on the Ultra graphics preset and at the panel’s native 4K resolution. There were rare dips into the mid to upper 50s during chaotic moments in larger areas, but everything remained smooth and fast. If you want to push the frame rates up to the Titan’s maximum refresh of 120Hz or even a little higher, you can lower the resolution to 2560 x 1600, and it will still look sharp enough. But keeping the game at 4K Ultra and running DLSS 4 quality resulted in a good average of 90 to 100 fps, while adding single frame creation boosted it comfortably to 120 to 140 fps.
system |
MSI Titan 18 / RTX 5090 / Core Ultra 9 285HX / 64GB / 6TB |
Asus ROG Strix Scar 16 / RTX 5080 / Core Ultra 9 275HX / 32GB / 2TB |
Razer Blade 16 (2025) / RTX 5090 / Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 / 32GB / 2TB |
|---|---|---|---|
| Geekbench 6 single cpu | 3054 | 3113 | 2968 |
| Geekbench 6 multi CPU | 21957 | 19709 | 15922 |
| GPU Geekbench 6 (OpenCL) | 234632 | 200189 | 213016 |
| Cinebench 2024 Single | 133 | 137 | 119 |
| Cinebench 2024 Multi | 2173 | 1965 | 1287 |
| PugetBench for Photoshop | 8037 | 8482 | 8679 |
| Sustained SSD Reads (MB/s) | 14516.67 | 6832.06 | 6726.25 |
| Sustained SSD writes (MB/s) | 9194.8 | 6550.21 | 4931.41 |
| 3DMark Time Spy | 24897 | 20977 | 22498 |
The fan noise, while loud, is not as bad as some The 16-inch gaming laptops I’ve tested. The Titan’s large chassis allows for more effective cooling under load, blowing a lot of hot air out its sides. The keyboard surface near the laptop’s hinge gets incredibly hot to the touch, but fortunately, your fingers aren’t spared on the WASD keys. The width of the chassis also means that the six-speaker sound system can help a little with directional game sounds like gunfire. Although the speakers are unfortunately adequate for movies and music, they lack depth and are low in quality.
1/7
There are two elephants in the room with Titan: the looming lure of a proper gaming desktop and the class of 16- and 18-inch gaming laptops with RTX 5080 GPUs underneath. You can get a more powerful desktop for half the price of the Titan, add a 240Hz QD-OLED display, and Still You have enough money to buy an M5 MacBook Pro or even an Asus ROG Zephyrus G14. But let’s be honest, if you’re considering an 18-inch, 8-pound gaming laptop, you’re probably moving it enough that this combo doesn’t work. But in this case, you can save about $2,400 to buy a gaming laptop with a 5080 display like Asus ROG Strix Scar 16 And get, on average, 7 to 10 fps of Titan performance.
When running benchmarks on the Titan’s RTX 5090, running at full capacity, I was amazed at how close the 5080 laptop was on its heels. For $2,100 to $2,400 more than the Asus ROG Strix Scar 16 or Lenovo Legion Pro 7i, the Titan only produces 7 more fps on average at 4K, or about 9 more fps at 2.5K. The displays on these laptops are a little smaller and lower resolution than the Titan’s, but they have beautiful 240Hz OLED displays with deeper blacks, bolder colors, and stronger contrast. As much as I like the size and brightness of Titan’s Mini LEDs, I prefer the look of those OLED displays. Even the 5090-equipped Razer Blade 16 and 18, expensive machines in their own right, cost $1,000 less than the Titan. Half an inch thinner and 3 pounds lighter Blade 16 They are more versatile and travel-friendly, and their performance is mostly on par with the Titan. Although the Titan has a higher-end CPU (with twice as many cores), greater cooling (for quieter fans), and user-accessible RAM slots (though… no easily Accessible), faster Thunderbolt 5 ports, and two additional M.2 SSD slots.
Patients who compete with Titan still get a machine unlike anything else. It’s a no-brainer purchase, far removed from any semblance of pragmatism or value-for-dollar shopping — even if you’re aiming for a little protection for the future. But despite its flaws and extremely high price, it’s still a beast of a laptop with its own raucous charm.
Photography by Antonio G. Di Benedetto/The Verge