Acer Nitro 5 Gaming Laptop, 10th Gen Intel Core i5-10300H,NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Ti, 15.6" Full HD IPS 144Hz Display, 8GB DDR4,256GB NVMe SSD,WiFi 6, DTS X Ultra,Backlit Keyboard,AN515-55-59KS
Acer Nitro 5 Gaming Laptop, 9th Gen Intel Core i5-9300H, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650, 15.6" Full HD IPS Display, 8GB DDR4, 256GB NVMe SSD, Wi-Fi 6, Backlit Keyboard, Alexa Built-in, AN515-54-5812
Acer’s latest stab at the budget PC gaming scene, the Acer Nitro 5 ticks off the right boxes for your portable gaming needs. Ideal for budget-minded gamers, this gaming laptop certainly expands your options for a cheap laptop that can handle the more demanding PC games. That’s because Acer Nitro 5 delivers more for less, with a price tag as low as $749 (£899, about AU$1009). It rocks an Nvidia GeForce GTX graphics card and a mid-tier 8th-generation Intel Core processor then rounds it all out with a user-controllable dual-fan cooling system, a decent 1080p screen and a keyboard comfortable enough to play on for hours on end. With its combination of low price, decently powerful specs and a nice feature set, there’s no denying that the Acer Nitro 5 is one of the best value laptops out there. Of course, some sacrifices do have to be made, but none affect this laptop’s overall performance enough to matter, especially for the savings it offers.
Acer Nitro 5 AN515 -54-51M5-15.6" - i5-9300H - NVIDIA GTX 1650-8GB - 1TB HDD+128GB SSD, Black
Price and Availability: The Acer Nitro 5 is one of the most affordable gaming laptops in the market today. With its $749 starting price, the same model that we tested, you get its most basic configuration. This exact configuration is available in the UK, though it does cost about £335 more.
This spec is, however, not available in Australia. The most basic configuration available there, according to the Acer website, is the AU$1,999 one that includes the Intel Core i7-8750H processor, Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050 with 4GB, 16GB of RAM, 1TB HDD and a 128GB SSD.
Several other configurations are on hand for the US market, the most expensive of which is the $1099. For that price, the laptop boasts an Intel Core i7-7700HQ processor, 16GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD, though its GPU and hard drive are the same.
Generally speaking, the Nitro 5 lines up against similarly priced and configured gaming laptops, like the Dell G3 15 and Lenovo Legion Y530, though user-controlled cooling is a first in this niche with this laptop.
Design
Having said that, the Acer Nitro 5 design is also nothing to write home about. It’s pretty underwhelming, and the fact that it is a budget laptop means there will be signs of cutbacks – and these are noticeable. The screen lid, for example, is made of cheap plastic. The top cover and the area around the keyboard track fingerprints like crazy, and the screen has almost an inch of bezel around it, all of which make us feel like we’re PC gaming in the early aughts.
Worst of all, though, is the laptop’s trackpad. One could argue that you shouldn’t expect much from a trackpad to satisfy your gaming needs, but we have to say that this model’s trackpad is just ridiculous.
Keyboard
Jumping back a moment, a major win for the Acer Nitro 5 is its keyboard. There’s nothing overtly special about it. Sure, the symbols are in red, the backlight – which, by the way, is only activated when plugged in, so the keys are hard to see in the dark when its not – is red, and the WASD keys are emboldened in red paint.
Overall, this is just your typical, middle-of-the-road keyboard. That said, we find it comfortable as well as quite reliable. It’s fast and responsive, and we haven’t experienced any lags, missed presses or accidental presses. Whether you’re typing or gaming, that’s all that matters.
Trackpad
Now, here’s where we found a major complaint. We agree that gaming laptop trackpads are generally frowned upon in PC gaming, especially for FPS, RPG and action games. But, this laptop’s trackpad is so substandard you won’t even want to use it for regular computer tasks.
The trackpad gives a lot of travel and it’s very stiff, which means that you have to really do some hard pressing for anything to register, resulting in early finger fatigue. Buttons 1 and 2, located in the front left and right sections of the trackpad, respectively, have it worse, resulting in many missed presses. We gave up on it after a day, and switched to a proper mouse.
Display, camera and sound
These three things we’re lukewarm about. The camera, which offers video recording at 720p 30fps at its highest setting, is grainy. It’s just fine for web chats, but don’t expect much quality imagery produced here.
The laptop’s sound is a little hyped on the high-end and very echoey, though you could personalize it with the equalizer in the Dolby Audio software. In short, it’s yet another laptop with subpar audio – par for the course, basically (unless you’re Origin.
Finally, the 1080p display, while still sharp and clear, is a little on the darker side (even at its brightest setting) and is practically the exact opposite of bezel-free. We’ve seen other gaming laptops at this price put a little more focus on the display, which we’d like to see here.