- Hey guys, this is Austin.
We've done our fair share
of Fortnite videos,
but today we're taking
a look at what might
just be the best cheap
laptop for Fortnite,
the $450 Lenovo IdeaPad 330S.
Take a look around, and this is
a surprisingly solidly built laptop.
So, Lenovo did opt to go
with aluminum for the build,
and well, for the most part it's sturdy.
There's gonna be maybe a
little bit of screen flex,
as well as a little bit in the chassis.
It does feel nicely sturdy.
There's also a reasonable
selection of ports.
So Lenovo loaded it up with a USB-C port,
there's also going to be a USB 3.0,
which can charge your device
even when the laptop's closed,
a HDMI, and if you flip the
laptop to the other side,
there's one more USB 3.0 port,
as well as an SD card reader.
Open the IdeaPad up and
there's a full-size keyboard
with a number row and it's also backlit,
which is especially nice to see
at this kind of price point.
Usually when it comes to budget laptops,
there's a lot of bloatware onboard.
While there's going to be
a little bit on the Lenovo,
I'm gonna say it's actually
not going to be that bad,
and of course, it's going
to be easily removable,
unlike some other laptops
that you spend hours
trying to uninstall the
18th trial of McAfee on.
You know what I'm talking about.
- [Ken] 18?
- Well, they sometimes...
I feel there's like three
different McAfee things
they load on laptops these days.
There's like security, there's
like the internet security,
and there's like some
total something something,
you don't need any of that.
Just hit uninstall with the
SSD, it's nice and fast.
Okay, 18 was an exaggeration,
I'm sorry, it's three.
Open up the Ideapad, you're actually
going to find a few interesting things,
at least if you're a nerd like me.
First of all, we have our processor.
Now this guy is rocking the Core i5-8250U,
as well as the new 8th-gen Intel chip.
That means that we're going to be getting
a full quad-core design,
which is really nice in a $450 laptop.
There's a lot of interesting
stuff inside here though.
First of all, it seems like
there's almost definitely
some version of this,
maybe not this laptop,
at least this board, that
does take advantage of
a MX150 graphics card that looks to be
about the right size for the GPU,
as well as where the GDDR5 would go.
But there's some other
interesting stuff here,
including the Intel-AC WIFI card,
it's going to be dual-band,
should be plenty powerful,
plenty fast, and on top of that,
we also do have a 8GB of RAM.
So, there's going to be 4 gigs here,
as well as 4 gigs on the
backside running a dual channel,
and that is going to be very important
to keep those UHD 620 Graphics
on the Core i5 nice and fed.
Is that enough specs for ya,
cause I've got even more.
You should be wary of which
model of this laptop you pick up.
Most are going to be rocking
a 1 Terabyte hard drive,
some do take advantage of
the M.2 slot to give you
some Optane support, but what
we've got here is instead,
a 128 GB two and a 2.5-inch data drive.
I say that because of course,
that's going to give you
the best performance out of the box.
This one performs pretty reasonable,
but if you ever wanna upgrade this guy,
as opposed to just throwing
in an extra hard drive,
you're pretty much limited to adding
a second SSD in that M.2 slot.
Last, but certainly not least,
on Austin's Tour of the Inside a Laptop,
we have the 30 Wh battery.
Now that looks like a pretty large cell;
however, 30 Wh is
not a lot for a laptop.
Part of that is because, this
is actually partially hollow.
It looks bigger than it really is.
30 Wh is gonna be
enough to get somewhere
between five to six hours of use,
but it's not going to be a lot,
and it is a very easy
way to tell that Lenovo
was cutting some costs when
they designed this laptop.
Put all this together
and what you've got is
a pretty decent little
laptop, but of course,
the real question is
can it play Fortnite?
Jump into the game, and what we're getting
is an incredibly playable
30 frames per second.
Because you know, that's what all games
should run at, right?
Real talk though, for a $450
laptop, as I run into a tree,
this is actually going to
be very, very playable.
So, I did have to turn
down some of the settings,
we are running at 768p,
I'll get into a little bit of that later,
but we are running on mostly low settings
with the view distance bumped up,
we've got motion blur on,
and importantly, we
have not only Vsync on,
but also the 30 frame per second cap.
So this can run a little
bit higher than 30.
If you uncap it, we're
running around like 40,
but it gets a little big erratic,
and when we turn on Vsync,
it actually smooths out
the action quite a bit.
It's not going to be as smooth
as full 60 fps experience,
but this is a $450 laptop,
and it's going to be completely
playable with Fortnite.
And with the Core i5 inside,
it's actually going to
stay reasonably cool.
It doesn't get above 65 degrees,
for the most part on the actual processor,
and because we aren't going
to be completely taxing it
with that 30 fps cap, it
means that the system itself
doesn't get all that warm either.
Sure, it's going to be a little warm
where that fan is underneath
the screen, but to the touch,
the laptop is nice and cool.
However, you might be asking yourself,
why exactly am I playing at
1366 by 768 on the resolution?
And that, my friends, is the biggest issue
with the Lenovo IdeaPad 330S.
The screen, just not that great.
This is a 15.6 inch 1366 by 768 screen.
And not only is that
not going to be all that
impressive to begin with,
but it's also a really cheap TN panel.
So, the viewing angels,
as you can see here,
are, well pretty terrible,
the color is just not going
to be accurate whatsoever,
there's just a lot of
issues with this screen,
and that doesn't even get into the idea.
This is a pretty large display
with almost no screen real estate.
Now to be fair, when
it comes to Fortnite,
the screen is actually
going to be totally fine.
In fact, it's almost a
slight advantage because
we can play at the full native
screen res of the laptop.
For almost everything
else though, it's just not
going to be all that great.
So, there is a 1080p option
that you can upgrade this
laptop with, but the problem there is that
once you start upgrading the screen,
the price of the laptop
will quickly get above $500,
and for that kind of money,
actually I do kind of
prefer the ASUS VivoBook
that I recently took a look at.
Then there's the issue of what
this thing actually costs.
So I was able to pick it up for $450,
and that price is solid.
Unfortunately when I took
a look at it this morning,
a lot of these were running
for a little bit closer
to $530, and again, at that price,
it gets to be a little
bit of a harder sale.
If you're able to pick this up for $450,
it's a pretty solid
package with the Core i5,
8 Gigs of RAM, as well as standard SSD,
but that screen is a big, big issue.
So if you're looking for an entry-level
Fortnite experience, by
all means, pick it up.
Other than that though, you may wanna look
at slightly higher-end options.
