• expired

[eBay Plus] Asus Tuf A15 Ryzen 7 4800H, RTX 2060 16GB / 512GB, $1,903.95 (Bonus $100 GiftCard) + $14.95 Post @ TitanGear eBay

190
PVOLTAGE

Original Coupon Deal

first post be nice, seems a good deal for the specs, I know the screen is not the best.

using code Pvoltage for 15% off

Not eligible for the $100 gift card as shipping is likely not to occur prior to June 30.

ASUS TUF FA506IV-AL043T 15.6in FHD RTX 2060 R7-4800H 16GB 512GB SSD Gaming Laptop | 15.6in (16:9) LED-backlit FHD (1920x1080) 144Hz Anti-Glare IPS-level Panel | AMD® Ryzen™ R7 4800H Processor | NVIDIA® GeForce® RTX 2060 , with 6GB GDDR6 VRAM | 16GB DDR4 3200MHz SDRAM | 512GB PCIe® Gen3 SSD | 2 Year Warranty

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closed Comments

  • +2

    Reading the title, I thought this was just the World's most expensive 2060.

  • +1

    The code is capped at max $300

    Buy it now price: AU $2,203.95
    -AU $300.00
    Your price: AU $1,903.95

    EDIT: price is AFTER claiming $100 ASUS giftcard. Which is actually not $100 off the product

    • He added the $100 cashback into price

    • price is after the Asus $100 gift card

      Please read again

    • Gift cards, cashbacks (e.g CR, SB), rebates and any extra bonuses that come after your purchase shouldn't be calculated into the final price of the item. Guidelines.

      Please use the report button on the deal if there's something about the deal title that needs to be corrected. Thanks and regards

  • seems very good price

  • +11

    "Don't Buy The Asus TUF Gaming A15, Design Flaw Analysis"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRDUR-rPGsM

    • +10

      Better if you just tell us about the flaw so that we don’t have to watch YouTube videos …

      • +4

        Seems like the cooling system is flawed in that a lot of the intakes/vents are physically blocked by random components.

      • Not enough holes.

        • +1

          drill some after purchase lol

    • +4

      summary
      - small air intake
      - blocked air vent
      result in bad temperature and performance drop

      • +6

        Another one
        - very bad panel (~66% sRGB, undersaturated/washed out color)

        • High sRGB is more for photo/video editing and the like. I think the panel is good enough with IPs and 144hz refresh and G-sync support. Biggest problem is the overheating.

          • @MuddyClear: 99%sRGB (72% NTSC) is not high. It's normal. When working with printing and photo editing you may want higher than that.
            66% sRGB is pretty crap.

          • @MuddyClear: 90-100% sRGB is standard/normal IPS panel. Photo/video editing will requires high Adobe RGB or DCI P3 color space support and less color deviation. 66% sRGB is very very bad, think of cheap TN panels 10-15 years ago.

            • @Kingduytan: You sure it’s standard as there are plenty of low sRGB panels on laptops like this

              • @MuddyClear: "Normal" should be a better way to put it, as in it's what we normally expect when thinking of an IPS panel. Above that are excellent panels, below that are subpar and undesirable. 90% sRGB is usually where many people start to notice the color just aren't as good/vibrant as other "decent" ones. I wouldn't expect to see such low sRGB in 1k+ laptops nowadays.

                • @Kingduytan: If it’s not standard then don’t expect normal to be what you think it is. All entry level gaming laptops are $1k+ unless they are on special, which is not an every day thing. Laptops like the Dell G3/G5 have below average sRGB. Same story with Asus TUF range, and plenty of other laptops I’ve seen in reviews in this range. I would say this laptop has averaged sRGB, and I suspect 3k+ laptops to have the higher sRGB that you’re thinking. The average joe won’t care or need it.

                  • @MuddyClear: The average joes I know (elder/kids/students/office workers) do ask questions from time to time why their laptop screens is bad/"frosted"/"not colorful" (the ones with a bit more tech knowledge ask why their IPS screens aren't as good as mine), all they do are web browsing and office works. So I think most average joe do care, especially in this age and time where almost everyone I know owns an AMOLED phone. Non-tech people just buy laptops looking at res/refresh rate and think all IPS screens are created equal.

                    Again 100% sRGB is not high, it's the standard reference point and where the average joe like me and you would care about. Screens geared toward content creation aim at 100% Adobe RGB and DCI P3, 100% sRGB is a given and not even worth talking about. Lots of high-end laptop with 4k screens have 250%+ sRGB rating (like the Dell XPS), now that's what I would call high.

                    Anyway, probably let's call it agree to disagree. I just put this information out here so people are aware of the compromise they're making.

                    • @Kingduytan: I don’t think joe knows what sRGB is, and gamers don’t particularly think it’s critical for gaming, but sure let’s agree to disagree.

  • +1

    Amazing specs on paper. Was so close to triggering. Too bad it does not reach the potential and has design issues.
    https://www.reddit.com/r/laptops/comments/gcr6cm/people_who_…

    • This is the machine that I read one discussion where a guy took to his brand new machine with a dremel to fix the overheating. Hard pass. Such a shame. i was hoping my next machine would be either ASUS or MSI, but if this is what ASUS is putting out, just nope.

  • +1

    i purchased this few weeks ago with a similar $200 off ebay deal which actually came down few dollars cheaper(also came with cashback) and have regrets.

    The laptop runs HOT , and can get very load after some long gaming sessions .

    i would probably hold back on this one and spend a bit more for a better design gaming laptop with a 2060.

  • Dont order the delivery date is after a month and you wont be able to claim the gift card i messaged the seller to confirm

    • thanks, I will adjust

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