Gaming laptop makers should be forced to disclose graphics card TGPs and that's a hill I will happily die on
I'm sick of having to search high and low for the power limits of mobile GPUs, despite it being one of the most important specs.
As is my wont, I've spent the morning checking through the best deals on gaming laptops, which is about as tough going as you might expect in these, the days of the RAMpocalypse. But though prices have absolutely gone up, and you'll be lucky to find a worthy RTX 5060 gaming laptop for under $1,000, there are some good machines out there for prices that don't immediately make me sick up a little in my mouth.
Where the acid tang of bile does dance across the tongue, however, is when it comes to trying to pin down exactly what level of performance I might be given to expect from a certain model of gaming laptop and its graphics chip. And I am beyond infuriated at laptop manufacturers arbitrarily hiding the absolutely vital information.
You might have thought it was as straightforward as simply, 'ah look, here's an RTX 5060, that's better than an RTX 5050, job done.' Except no, life and laptops are never that simple. The issue is that that where desktop GPUs have a fixed total graphics power (TGP) mobile graphics cards don't have that luxury. The power limits imposed on a given laptop GPU are entirely driven by the level of power and cooling they have at their disposal and that can change model-by-model.
The current Nvidia RTX 50-series GPUs have a range of overlapping TGPs, and that can have a huge impact on the sort of performance you can expect. An RTX 5050 machine running at peak 100 W (plus dynamic boost power) will regularly best an RTX 5060 running at just 55 W in pretty much any game. But manufacturers never make it easy to find out what the laptop you're looking at has inside it.
GPU | TGP |
|---|---|
RTX 5050 | 50-100 W |
RTX 5060 | 45-100 W |
RTX 5070 | 50-100 W |
RTX 5070 Ti | 60-115 W |
RTX 5080 | 80-150 W |
RX 5090 | 95-150 W |
It's something we always note in our gaming laptop reviews and in the end it often comes to reviews being the only way to reliably find what TGP you might expect to find in a machine. But then you have to rely on the fact that someone, somewhere has had a chance to take a look at the very SKU you're eyeballing in retail.
Which is absolutely maddening, especially as it's the most vital specification when it comes to choosing between otherwise similarly specced machines. And there's only one reason why they would hide the data, and it's not a good one.
If you're looking for the most affordable RTX 5060-powered gaming laptop, it's not unreasonable that you would land upon either of these MSI Cyborg SKUs. One has an Intel Core 7 240H and the other has an Intel Core 5 210H, but both have an RTX 5060 GPU. And I defy you to look at either of those listing pages and be able to tell me what the TGP ratings are. Thankfully, MSI is one of the few manufacturers that does tell you in its product pages what the peak power limits are—in this case 55 W.
But this Asus V16 with another RTX 5060? Nowhere, either in the product listing or the retailer listing does it tell you that it's running a 65 W power limit. How would I know that, rather than pick the Asus machine, I should actually go for either the cheaper HP Victus or preferably the Lenovo LOQ system?
This is (sadly) the cheapest I've been able to find a decent RTX 5060 gaming laptop selling for this week. There is an MSI Cyborg machine out there for less, but that's rocking a miserable 55 W TGP, so avoid that like it has the plague. The Victus may not be a lot higher than that, but it's a relatively slim chassis and the 144 Hz 1080p screen will be pretty well served by the RTX 5060 running at that level. There's a 10-core CPU in there, too, so the system is absolutely no slouch.
Key specs: RTX 5060 (75 W) | Core i7 13620H | 15-inch | 1080p | 144 Hz | 16 GB DDR5 | 512 GB SSD
Budget gaming laptops deals are not great right now, indeed finding good RTX 5060 laptops below the $1,000 mark has become virtually impossible. This Lenovo LOQ machine is slightly above, but it does have a decent 100 W GPU, a speedy 1080p screen, and the now miserably familiar memory/storage combo of a 512 GB SSD and 16 GB RAM. The memory side wouldn't be too bad if it wasn't for the fact it's single channel, but in our review that didn't actually harm gaming performance.
Key specs: RTX 5060 (115 W) | Ryzen 7 250 | 15-inch | 144 Hz | 1080p | 16 GB DDR5 | 512 GB SSD
Price check: Best Buy $1,099.99
Lenovo at least does give out the info, though you have to go through an opaque Lenovo parts site to get there, and with HP I had to talk to customer services, and I'm still not entirely sure they weren't grifting me. I did complain to the customer services technician that it was joke that manufacturers didn't make the information clear and they tried to blame Nvidia for witholding the information from public consumption, before sending me a link to the ratings for RTX 30- and 40-series HP laptops, waving the RTX 50-series TGPs aside as the same.
Still, both of these machines have higher TGP ratings for what is effectively the exact same graphics silicon as the MSI Cyborg and Asus V16 gaming laptops, and will deliver higher, smoother, more reliable gaming performance for around the same sort of cash.
But, damn it, it should be easy to find that vital info and I'm just mad as hell that it's not [rant over].

1. Best overall:
Razer Blade 16 (2025)
2. Best budget:
Lenovo LOQ 15 Gen 10
3. Best 14-inch:
Razer Blade 14 (2025)
4. Best mid-range:
MSI Vector 16 HX AI
5. Best high-performance:
Lenovo Legion Pro 7i Gen 10
6. Best 18-inch:
Alienware 18 Area-51
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Dave has been gaming since the days of Zaxxon and Lady Bug on the Colecovision, and code books for the Commodore Vic 20 (Death Race 2000!). He built his first gaming PC at the tender age of 16, and finally finished bug-fixing the Cyrix-based system around a year later. When he dropped it out of the window. He first started writing for Official PlayStation Magazine and Xbox World many decades ago, then moved onto PC Format full-time, then PC Gamer, TechRadar, and T3 among others. Now he's back, writing about the nightmarish graphics card market, CPUs with more cores than sense, gaming laptops hotter than the sun, and SSDs more capacious than a Cybertruck.
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