crudus said:
So please tell me from where this desire for owning a gaming laptop stems.
You mean outside being able to game on the go? You'd be surprised how convenient and necessary that is for some gamers, a wall socket is not a hard thing to find, even in a simple coffee place, let alone if you have more than one residence (home, college campus, girlfriend's flat, meeting up with mates for a LAN party, I can keep naming places all day if you'd like) or travel a lot. And that thing that lifts your laptop and provides better cooling (its English name escapes me atm) is not too heavy, both can fit in a laptop backpack quite easily and aren't hard to carry, at least for men (sorry ladies, I do feel for you on the issue).
Well if that's not reason enough, they might want one machine for both gaming and uni/study/work - a laptop for gaming can actually be used for other things too, y'know. Like say, if you're studying something like server admin stuff and them 8GB of RAM come in handy for running a number of virtual machines. Or you're studying visual design and having a top range graphics card isn't useless. Or if you're a programmer like me and compiling a long ass project gets done that much faster on a good processor.
Not to mention gaming laptops tend to have awesome batteries that can last up to and even over 10 hours when you're doing comparatively (to gaming's battery use) menial things, making them awesome for stuff like note taking and such (especially if you have slow, shit handwriting like me, while being able to type 70wpm).
Oh and know another very universally awesome thing about having a laptop compared to having a PC? When your power decides to go out, even for a second, you're not risking losing a pile of work on whatever project you've been doing. I've seen an entire classroom lose a straight 45 minutes of coding cause they were working on desktops, while those of us carrying laptops just kept on working uninterrupted.
Also, you'd be surprised at the prices, if you find a good deal, it's not at all a ripoff price. In fact, it might be a complete bargain. I spend some 600 euros buying myself a desktop PC back in October. Phenom II 965 QuadCore 3.2 GHz, 6850 gfx and 4GB of RAM (I won't lie, I didn't spare much on the case, the cooling or the power supply either, but I also skipped buying stuff like a DVD-RW). In the meantime, I bought a 2TB HDD to have for some extra storage as I was running out, which ran me another 70 euros or so.
A few months back, I see a laptop for just under 700 euros, here it is, though no longer available (scuse the Serbian, but specs are easy enough to see):
http://www.pcpractic.rs/proizvodi/laptop/6932-asus-a53sv-sx354
Lemme sum that up for you - i7 2630QM 2-2.9GHz (turbo), 6 MB cache core (one of the lovely SandyBridge ones), 6GB RAM, 15.6" screen (which I could use in conjunction with the monitor at home for oh so many things), GT540M 2GB graphics card and 750 GB HDD.
The laptop kills my PC - granted it came a few months later, but considering the upgrade for essentially the same price, it's a hell of a deal. Oh and don't scoff at the prices, it's how things are here, I know you guys in the US (and probably other countries as well) could easily get a better PC/laptop for these prices, but the fact is, that's the prices we run with and the point is how they compare between a gaming PC and a gaming laptop.