ASUS TUF F15 Review
When it comes to gaming laptops, the FX506 is a budget laptop. The price may be 1400 euros, but this laptop mainly offers specifications for your money: an i7-11800H processor and an RTX3060 video card. The laptop just doesn’t know how to use it. The cpu can be fast, but it isn’t in games. The 144Hz screen does not live up to that speed and is also moderate in terms of contrast and brightness. The housing is made of plastic and feels quite cheap. All that makes the F15 not recommended.
Pros
- A lot of hardware for your money
- Equipped with Thunderbolt 4
Cons
- The SD card reader is missing
- CPU slow in games
- Bad screen
We recently published a review of three laptops with an RTX 3080 video card from ASUS, BTO and Razer. The ASUS came out on top in the test and that had to do with the processor, among other things. The Ryzen 9 5900HX made mincemeat of the Intel laptops that were still equipped with CPUs of the tenth generation. Its successor, Tiger Lake H, had already been announced at that time .
Meanwhile, we have tested our first laptop with Tiger Lake H processor. The laptop in question is an ASUS F15 from the TUF series. TUF is ASUS’ cheaper game brand, which is positioned below ROG and has been around for several years. We’ve reviewed TUF laptops in various guises before, such as the TUF Dash in February and the TUF A15 in April’s Laptop Best Buy Guide. ASUS model numbers are a bit complicated; the model in this review is also called FX506 , but the box says ‘TUF Gaming F15’ in big letters.
The appearance of the F15 is very similar to that of the A15, although the back of the screen does not consist of a metal plate, as on the A15, but is made entirely of plastic. That plastic looks and feels cheap; you can easily let the housing collapse under pressure and if you grab the corners of the screen, you can easily warp it.In terms of quality, you might expect more for 1400 euros, but in this case you mainly pay for the hardware. The F15 is equipped with a Core i7-11800H processor with eight cores and an RTX 3060 video card. A look at the Pricewatch shows that the ASUS is the cheapest laptop that combines this specific CPU and GPU at the time of writing.
In this short review, we mainly focus on the performance of the new i7 processor, which is why we briefly discuss the other features of the laptop, such as the keyboard, touchpad and connectivity options.
As far as connectivity options are concerned, the laptop is reasonably well equipped. There are three USB-A connections, which have a maximum transfer speed of 5Gbit/s. The USB-C connection has support for Thunderbolt 4 and can therefore also be used to connect external screens. Charging via USB-C is not possible. A USB-C charger can currently deliver a maximum of 100W and that is not enough to replace the supplied 200W charger. However, if you forgot your charger, you can’t top up with a generic USB-C charger. There is also Ethernet available based on a Realtek Gigabit controller. The wireless network card, quite unusually, has a Mediatek controller and supports Wi-Fi 6. The HDMI connection supports version 2.0 of the protocol, which is sufficient to drive 4k screens at 60Hz.
We also get along well with the keyboard. The keys offer a nice amount of travel and a clear touch. The backlight can be set in all colors of the rainbow, but not separately per key, for which you will have to purchase a more expensive ROG laptop. The touchpad works as it should and responds well to touches with more than one finger. The surface is not particularly large and is also limited because the buttons are not hidden under it, but are placed loosely in the housing.
benchmarking
Announced in mid-May, the eleventh-generation Intel processors are Intel’s first 45W laptop processors made at 10nm. Compared to the predecessors at 14nm, the maximum turbo clock speed is slightly lower: 5.0 instead of 5.3GHz, but the Tiger Lake architecture is faster per clock tick than its predecessor Comet Lake. We’ve known that for a while, because Intel released this architecture in the fall of 2020, but then it was about 15W processors.