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What Is A Good Laptop Gaming Graphics Card

Which is the best laptop graphics card for gaming?

The best GPU for laptop gaming is not necessarily the best GPU presently available in the market place.What about the settings you want to game at?Any preference in the number of monitors you wish to use?Are you brand specific or just want the best (regardless if it’s value for money)?The best depends on several factors.You haven’t provided any system config. or stated what settings you want to game at. I’ll take a general consensus from high-end mainstream laptop gamers.Prioritized as such:Maintain a decent temperature while gaming on high settings and above.Ultra high settings with basic advanced settings on.High settings with complete user control of advanced settings.FHD/1080p upto 2k gaming.Stutter free FPS between 60–120.Only laptop screen - no additional monitors and/or devices.Running on power cable while gaming for more than 2 hours.Gaming on battery only for 1–2 hours.Exclusively considering the above 8 factors:MSI GT62VR 7RE Dominator Pro.i7–7700HQ/16GB DDR4 at 2400MHz upto 64GB/256GB SSD/1TB HDD at 5400RPM/Win10/8GB GTX 1070 GDDR5 (user available 7.80GB).Upto Ultra High settings on a 2k resolution at 120FPS.In india it retails at ~ INR:216K-222K.PS. This maybe a wrong option for you but, that’s your fault. You haven’t mentioned what settings you want to game at.

Is laptop with 8gb ram 2gb graphics card is good to play games like far cry 4?

Far Cry 4 is a very demanding game, so for most laptops the answer is no.Now, I say most since there are some high end machine from ASUS, MSI and even Dell that really do provide a high level of performance.  However, those machines generally weigh close to 10 lbs and cost in the range of $1300-2000.  At that price point you would be better off building/buying a desktop machine and a small portable laptop (you could do both and still have $100-200 left over after the fact).  The other big drawback with those high end laptops is that their battery life tends to be awful.  This makes them kind of pointless in my opinion since they won't be as powerful as an equivalent desktop and you still need to plug them in most of the time.

Graphic card I should buy for this laptop for good gaming performance ?

No good.

To run all the modern games today you need intel i5 > 2.5 GHZ boost up to 3.0+ GHZ (Or AMD equivalent), and a graphic card > Nvidia 9600M-GT or AMD Radeon HD 6470M and above.
The 1 GIG or 2 GIG GT640M appears to be a decent mobile video card.
Oh and 6 GIG 1333MHZ/1600MHZ DDR3 RAM, although you can add this your self.

http://www.notebookcheck.net/Mobile-Graphics-Cards-Benchmark-List.844.0.html

US
http://www.shopping.hp.com/en_US/home-office/-/products/Laptops/HP-ENVY/B5Y73AV?HP-ENVY-dv6z-7200-Notebook-PC
http://us.acer.com/ac/en/US/content/series/aspirev3

Also look at Asus and Sony.

Third Gen Intel i7 for laptops has just come out: 2.9 Ghz boost to 3.6 Ghz so worth a look if you can get one.

Intel® Core™ i7-3820QM Processor
(8M Cache, 2.7GHz boost up to 3.70 GHz)

Intel® Core™ i7-3720QM Processor
(6M Cache, 2.6 GHz boost up to 3.60 GHz)

Intel® Core™ i7-3520M Processor
(4M Cache, 2.9 boost up to 3.60 GHz)

Also:
AMD Dual-Core A6-4400M (3.2GHz/2.7GHz, 1MB L2 Cache )
http://ark.intel.com/products/family/65506/3rd-Generation-Intel-Core-i7-Processors/mobile

Do they make any good external graphics cards for gaming?

Yes and no. What you are speaking of is the elusive holy grail of laptop gaming. The issue in virtually all laptops is they are designed for low power usage, not processing capability. Most laptops have their graphics cards soldered directly onto the motherboard and lack PCIe slots (and room) for additional hardware.

Yet there is hope, I have never tried it but if your computer has an ExpressCard slot then apparently you can buy adapters that convert the ExpressCard to a PCIe slot, from there you hook up your own graphics card and away you go. If your laptop only has USB ports then an external device is out of the question, even USB 3.0 lacks the bandwidth to communicate with a GPU.

Here is a link, http://www.techradar.com/news/computing-...

Keep in mind that by the time you buy the adapter, the graphics card, the power supply and get everything running you might as well have put that cash towards a better laptop. Another word of warning as well. Make sure you double check your wiring and are experienced with electronics. If this setup, especially with another power supply hooked into it, goes wrong you couple put a direct blast of unrestricted power through the ExpressCard slot, directly to the PCIe bus and toast your motherboard, or even worse, through your hand and toast you.

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