After jumping the hurdles of our review gauntlet, the MacBook Pro with Retina display proved itself as a top-notch machine for the creative professionals it's geared towards, and anyone willing to pay a premium. Save for a brief bout with Diablo III, our time spent gaming on the hardware was limited. Ever since, we've wondered how the Kepler-toting, Ivy Bridge-packing laptop would handle one of our favorite graphics-intensive pastimes. Sure, Apple machines aren't exactly en vogue when it comes to playing video games, but Cupertino's ultra-high-resolution Mac simply begs to be put to the test. We loaded up Windows 7 on a MacBook Pro carrying an NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M with 1 GB of VRAM, the stock 2.3GHz processor and 16GB of RAM (upgraded from the vanilla 8GB configuration) and put it through its paces to see how it performs.
Windows on Retina display
Making full use of the Retina display's 2,880 x 1,880 resolution, the Windows desktop is startlingly huge with tiny text and dwarfed navigation buttons lost within it. Pegging the dpi at 200 percent, however, strikes a balance between readability and definition. System text, icons and windows are easy on the eyes, but third-party apps are hit-or-miss, as they require developer support for large, crisp and readable visuals. With a bit of tweaking, the oversized-desktop is useable, but a 1,920 x 1,080 experience is a bit easier on the eyes, and is more forgiving of apps that lack support for the extra pixels.Performance
When the Retina display struts its stuff, however, things aren't as peachy. The very same games that wowed us at 1080p struggle to run smoothly under the burden of the rig's pixel-pushing native resolution. Skyrim, for example, isn't the steadiest of rides at ultra settings. In fact, it's downright choppy, squeezing out just 21 fps with anti-aliasing turned off. Shifting gears to medium ekes out more frames for Skyrim, but still makes for a rocky ride.
Settings | FPS (2,880 x 1,880) | FPS (1920 x 1080) | |
The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim | Ultra | 21 | 37 |
High | 25 | 53 | |
Medium | 26 | 58 | |
Low | 36 | 82 | |
Arkham City | Extreme | 10 | 20 |
High | 29 | 54 | |
Medium | 34 | 61 | |
Low | 36 | 61 | |
Grand Theft Auto IV | High | 18 | 33 |
Medium | 20 | 39 | |
Low | 22 | 49 | |
Team Fortress 2 | Very High | 62 | 128 |
High | 67 | 140 | |
Medium | 73 | 187 | |
Low | 137 | 212 | |
Note: tests conducted on Windows with anti-aliasing turned off. |
On Windows, we wandered the vast expanses of Tamriel at 1,920 x 1,080 with medium settings for an hour and 40 minutes before our battery gave way. Under our standard battery test, the laptop kept alive for three hours and 39 minutes -- a far cry from the nine hours and 22 minutes managed under OS X. While the machine's underside can cause discomfort if it sits in your lap for long enough, the real issue comes courtesy of the keyboard. The WASD chiclet keys and aluminum trenches between them get seriously hot, making an external keyboard the better option.
PCMarkVantage | 3DMark06 | Battery life | |
---|---|---|---|
MacBook Pro with Retina display w/Windows (2.30GHz Core i7, GeForce GTX 650M, 16GB) | 15,152 | 14,426 | 3:39 |
Razer Blade (2.8GHz Core i7-2640M, GeForce GT555M, 8GB) | 14,379 | 11,556 | 2:57 |
Maingear Pulse 11 (2.1GHz Core i7-3612QM, GeForce GT 650M, 8GB) | 17,126 | 13,316 | 3:21 |
MSI GT70 (2.23GHz Core i7-3610QM, GeForce GTX670M, 16GB) | 14,073 | 18,955 | 2:49 |
MSI GT683DXR (2.00GHz Core i7-2630QM, GeForce GTX 570M, 12GB) | 9,074 | 16,862 | 2:40 |
Samsung Series 7 Gamer (2.30GHz Core i7-3610QM, GeForce GTX 675M, 16GB) | 11,515 | 21,131 | 2:11 |
Note: higher scores are better. |
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