As far as gaming laptops go, the Asus ROG Strix SCAR II doesn’t really look like it’s very different from the breed of high-end laptops we’ve come to expect from major gaming brands. However, it does bring the latest RTX GPUs from Nvidia, and boasts of top-of-the-line specs. So, at it’s price point of Rs. 1,64,990, is the ROG Strix SCAR II worth your money? We’ll take a look at exactly that, in this detailed review of the ROG Strix SCAR II.
First off, let’s get the specs out of the way. Asus was kind enough to send us the base configuration of the SCAR II and these are the specs it comes with:
While these specs themselves are pretty great, the higher end variant of the ROG Strix SCAR II (Rs. 2,09,990) comes with the RTX 2070, and a 512GB SSD along with everything else that this variant brings.
As far as the design and build of this laptop is concerned, Asus hasn’t left a lot to be desired here. The laptop is pretty thin for the hardware it’s packing, which is always appreciated, and it also feels really well built. The chassis is made out of plastic, but seriously, metal would make this laptop insanely heavy, and it’s of a really good quality.
The SCAR II doesn’t feel cheap to the touch at all, no matter how picky you want to be with it. It also comes in this dual-tone design with a camo-print covering up half of the base of the laptop, and while I’m not really a fan of this particular design choice, quite a lot of people like it; it’s basically all about personal preference.
Since I’m on the topic of bezels, I do have to give credit to Asus for really shrinking the bezels on all of the other three sides of the display. It’s a 15.6-inch FullHD display, with a 144Hz refresh rate, and 3ms latency — things that might not matter much to you if you’re a casual gamer, but if you’re looking for an experience with minimal input lag, and smooth visuals without motion blurring, this sort of thing is probably pretty important to you.
Anyway, the display itself looks pretty good. It’s bright, even though it’s not as bright as some might like, but it’s a matte panel, so it should be decent outdoors as well. Still, there are little to no chances that you’ll be playing games sitting in the sun. If you do tend to do that, this might be somewhat problematic for you.
Performance
Speaking about ‘most gaming laptops’, the performance is probably one of the most important things when considering a gaming laptop. After all, why else are you buying it in the first place? In my experience with the ROG Strix SCAR II, the performance has been pretty damn good.
Far Cry 5 pushed the laptop quite a bit too, but the SCAR II easily pushed out 80-90 FPS at Ultra settings in the game as well. With graphics set to Normal, the game got around 100+ FPS at all times which is just awesome.
I also tried playing PUBG on the laptop, and well, obviously, it was able to run the game pretty well. At Ultra settings, the game ran comfortably at over 130FPS; I didn’t really try it any settings lower than that since 130FPS is awesome anyway, and getting more than that wouldn’t have helped me anyway.
So yeah, as far as the performance of this laptop is concerned, it’s very impressive, and I don’t see any cause for complaint here. It can easily handle all the games thrown at it, and it should be solid for games coming out this year as well.
Like I said earlier, the ROG Strix SCAR II comes with a full sized keyboard, complete with a proper set of arrow keys. However, Asus has made subtle changes to the keyboard’s design to make it better suited for gamers. For starters, the WASD keys are accented, by which I mean they are transparent, so they’re easier to spot. There’s also a small marker on the ‘W’ key that is easily felt by a finger, so you can quickly position your hand without even looking at the keyboard.
Then there’s the fact that the volume up/down, mic mute, and ROG Armoury Crate keys are positioned separately, above the rest of the keyboard for easy access. So while you’re in a game, you can quickly adjust the audio level, mute/unmute your mic, and even access the ROG armoury crate so you can quickly adjust system settings, including the RGB lighting on your laptop, the fan speeds, and a lot more.
The ROG Strix SCAR II comes with a pretty big trackpad as far as most gaming laptops (or even most Windows laptops) are concerned, and I really appreciate the extra space it allows for making use of things like Windows gestures, and just general cursor movement without having to constantly reposition your hand.
As it is with most gaming laptops, the ROG Strix SCAR II comes with a whole army of ports in tow. The laptop has a USB-C port, 2x USB3.1 Gen 1 ports, 1x USB3.1 Gen 2 port, a miniDisplay port, an HDMI 2.0b port, RJ-45 ethernet port, card reader, and a headphone/mic combo port.
So yeah, I don’t think you’ll run out of ports while using this laptop, and it pretty much has you covered on all fronts, I/O wise.
The ROG Strix SCAR II comes with a 66Whr battery, and with that, the laptop does struggle with running the Core i7, and the RTX2060, if you’re doing intensive tasks, that is.
In normal, day to day usage, the laptop manages to last around 4 hours with some web browsing, and general text-editing. However, if you try to do intense gaming on the laptop, it pretty much ends up dying in around an hour and a half of usage. Still though, I wouldn’t expect anyone to be gaming without connecting the power cord in, so that shouldn’t really be an issue.
Overall, the ROG Strix SCAR II is definitely a pretty impressive gaming laptop for its starting price of Rs. 1,64,990, especially considering the fact that it packs in the latest RTX-series of GPUs from Nvidia. Most other laptops in this price range are still packing last generation’s GTX10-series GPUs which aren’t bad by any means, but I’d really suggest getting an RTX GPU instead, if not for the ray-tracing, then for the future proofing it brings.