Battery Life

Performance-focused notebooks rarely achieve excellent battery life, although the benchmark has been raised in the last couple of years. A device like the MSI Titan GT77 is designed to be plugged into power for most of the time though, and the component choices reflect that. With a massive RTX 3080L Ti processor, four sticks of DDR5-4000, three M.2 SSDs, and a 360 Hz display, the idle power draw of this system is significant. The display does at least switch to 60 Hz automatically when you unplug the laptop from AC power. This notebook also supports both hybrid graphics (NVIDIA Optimus) as well as discrete only, and for the battery testing the notebook was configured in hybrid mode.

To combat the high power draw, MSI has fit in a 99 Wh battery, which is bumping into the largest viable battery in a laptop computer since you can not take a battery larger than 100 Wh on to a commercial flight.

For all of our battery life measurements, the display is set to 200 nits which on this device was 59%.

Web Battery Life

Battery Life 2016 - Web

At 380 minutes of runtime, the Titan GT77 was able to surpass the Raider GE76 we tested a few months ago. It is still a long way from the all-AMD ASUS G513QY. AMD has really done an excellent job power-gating their graphics.

Battery Life 2016 - Web - Normalized

Looking at the normalized results, which removes the battery size from the equation, the power efficiency of this over the Raider GE76 is pretty good. It is surprising since this notebook has quad-channel memory, compared to just dual-channel in the Alder Lake HX powered Raider GE76.

Movie Playback

Battery Life Movie Playback

Movie playback is offloaded to fixed function decode in the iGPU, so it is generally one of the tasks that uses the least amount of energy. That is the case here as well, although the base power draw of the rest of the system does mask it somewhat.

Battery Life Tesseract

Our Tesseract score divides the movie playback runtime by the length of The Avengers, and the Titan GT77 can almost get through three viewings of that movie before shutting down.

Battery Charge Time

Battery Charge Time

The Titan GT77 ships with a 250-Watt AC Adapter, but it has a very large 99 Wh battery to fill. Laptops meant for on the go often offer fast-charging options, but this desktop-replacement system does not, so the charge time is a very average three hours.

Storage Performance

The review unit that was provided shipped with three Samsung PM9A1 drives with each being 1 TB in size. The PM9A1 is a very quick PCIe 4.0 SSD from previous testing.

PCMark 10 System Drive Benchmark Average Access Time

PCMark 10 System Drive Benchmark Bandwidth

PCMark 10 System Drive Benchmark Score

The results are not quite as strong as the Raider GE76 unit, which shipped with three 2 TB PM9A1 drives. In the world of storage, larger drives offer increased parallelization and, at least when looking at the same model, are generally faster, so the 2 TB outperforming the 1 TB is not unexpected. The PCIe 4.0 drive still performed very well though with the smaller capacity.

Wireless

MSI equips the Titan GT77 with Killer’s AX1675i wireless networking solution, which is a Wi-Fi 6E solution based off the Intel Typhoon Peak lineup which includes both this Killer and the Intel AX210. For those that prefer hardwired networking, the Killer E3100G adapter is a 2.5 Gbps solution with an Ethernet jack found on the right side of the device.

WiFi Performance - TCP

Our test bed for Wi-Fi is the ASUS ROG Rapture GT-AX11000 which is Wi-Fi 6, but not 6E, so it does not support the 6 GHz range. Performance on 5 GHz for the Killer AX1675i was excellent though. Intel’s Wi-Fi offerings are the best in the PC space, with very stable drivers and excellent performance.

Display Accuracy Final Thoughts
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  • IBM760XL - Friday, September 2, 2022 - link

    This is how I know my 2018 MSI has poor battery life: a hulking DTR like this has twice the battery life, and my laptop has never had much more battery life than it does now.

    Props to MSI for finally putting a properly-sized battery in their laptop. But I'm also rather impressed that it can get over 6 hours of battery life in general. The rest of the specs are a bit overkill for what I need, but hopefully they've stopped putting 42 WHr batteries in their dGPU laptops in general. Or at least propagated their recent power efficiency improvements.

    Now where's the all-AMD variant that gets battery life figures similar to that Asus? I want the Asus's hardware with the MSI's design.
  • garblah - Friday, September 2, 2022 - link

    Why aren't 120hz OLED or 144hz OLED displays more common on high end gaming laptops? Who is hitting 240hz or 360! hz on a laptop. I can't imagine paying 3000 dollars for a screen with the ubiquitous grey "blacks" of an IPS panel.
  • iranterres - Sunday, September 4, 2022 - link

    I gotta love this new batch of stoves that Intel's put to market LOL.
  • Oxford Guy - Monday, September 5, 2022 - link

    Titanic tinnitus.
  • snowdrop - Wednesday, September 7, 2022 - link

    The multitasking testing only really shows that more threads (& more power) = better at multitasking which seems a bit obvious.

    The 12900HX is 24 threads (8P, 8E), the 12900HK is 20 threads (6P, 8E), and the 11980HK / 5900HX are both 16 threads so it's hard to discern architectural advantages from Alder Lake.

    Adding a 12th gen part with a similar core count to the 11980HK / 5900HX like the 12600H (4P, 8E) or 12650H (6P, 4E) with 16 threads would make this comparison much more useful? Or possibly adding a test of the 12900HK limited to 16 threads by disabling the E cores (8P, 0E)?

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