Up until today, the cheapest gaming [[link]] laptop deal we've seen this week was an HP Victus 15 model for $678 at Walmart. But after a morning of browsing through a variety of retailers, I reckon I have something better: an Acer Nitro V 15 for just .
Enable DLSS upscaling (and in some cases, Frame Generation) and you'll get even better performance—or you can stick to the same frame rate and just use a better graphics preset. Naturally, the Ryzen 5 7535HS isn't quite as performant as the Ryzen 7 7735HS but there's not a huge difference between the two.
But my test Acer does have one big advantage over the laptop in this deal, and it's the amount of RAM. The $600 one only comes with a single 8 GB DDR5 stick and that's just not enough for today's games. Fortunately, it's really easy to remove the back of the laptop and swap it out for a 16 GB kit.
Just remove the [[link]] screws and then use a thin piece of plastic to gently prise the back off—don't pull on it, otherwise you risk snapping the lugs that hold it in place. Once it's off, though, you'll have instant access to the RAM and you'll see that there's a spare M.2 slot for another SSD.
The RAM sticks are only held in place by the springy metal arms on each side, so you just pull gently on those and lift the DIMMs out. And you don't need to spend a lot of money to replace them. By default, the Acer laptop uses DDR5-4800 CL40 RAM and you can pick up a 16 GB kit of Crucial memory for .
While you've got the back off, you might as well pop another SSD in there, as the standard 512 GB one will fill up very quickly with games. So, how about this 1 TB Klevv M.2 SSD for ?
Neither the replacement RAM nor the extra SSD are very fast, but they perfectly match the rest of the hardware inside the Acer Nitro V 15. And best of all, buying the whole lot will cost three cents shy of $699—that's $21 more than the HP Victus laptop I mentioned at the start, but you're getting twice as much RAM and three times more storage (512 GB + 1 TB versus 512 GB). That's a clear win in my book.
I know the HP laptop has a better CPU, but you really won't notice the difference in the vast majority of games, and this Acer deal is better value for money. Given all the doom and gloom about prices in PC gaming right now, we could all do with a bit of good news now and then.