The Dell G16, I think it's fair to say, has a bit of a love it or hate it design. It's certainly not a bad-looking machine, at least to these aged eyes, but it's definitely on the chonky side compared to some of the more modern laptops we've tested. But even if you're not a fan of its angled looks, I doubt you can argue with this particular model as a value proposition—because for right now, it's pretty much impossible to beat in terms of bang for your buck.
Headline news here is that 240 Hz 1600p display. That's a screaming fast IPS panel, and the sort you normally find in laptops north of the $1,500 mark—as is the 140 W RTX 4070 GPU that feeds it.
You'll still need some DLSS Frame Generation help to get the most out of all those Hz, but this is a mobile GPU with serious grunt. That screen and GPU combo shines brightly among the other listings, especially as the whole machine here is available for the same sort of price as many RTX 4060 lappys currently on the market.
It's not lacking in the CPU department, either. The processor here is the , a 24-core (eight Performance, 16 Efficient) beastie that might be a couple of years old now, but can still tear through just about any gaming or productivity task you can throw at it [[link]] with aplomb.
Mind you, it's a hot-running chip, so I'd expect the fans here to spin up something fierce under heavy load. Perhaps that's why Dell has chosen to give it such a substantial chassis and rear lip, to give those high-spec components room to breathe in a mobile form factor.
It's paired with 16 GB of DDR5-4800, which I'll admit is not the fastest. Still, memory speeds won't account for much of a noticeable difference in most games, so I'll take it—again, especially for the cash.
Rounding out [[link]] the package is a 1 TB Gen 4 SSD, as is right and proper, and... yep, that's an excellent laptop deal alright. Really, the decision here comes down to whether that angular, industrial chassis suits your use case. I wouldn't call this the [[link]] most portable of laptops, nor the prettiest—but if sheer power for less cash is your goal, you'll struggle to beat the Dell G16 at this price.