![]() But for once I think there's a genuine opportunity here for it to be actual competition. I'm sure if you bought literally any thin and light notebook on the market, whether with a 4700U, Tiger Lake Xe graphics chip or something equivalent, you could _maybe_ get a similar experience running games and everything natively in windows. I'm installing Witcher 3 and a few other games to try them out. World of Warcraft running natively stays well in excess of 60FPS with everything on Ultra except turning down shadows and SSAO, even with them on it puts out a respectable 30FPS. Reminder that the laptop is running on batteries, is barely warm to the touch and obviously inaudible. It feels smooth to the point where I could genuinely see myself just gaming on my MacBook Air. At 4K on an external monitor, 25-30FPS. I opened EVE Online in CrossOver, running natively at 2560x1600 with all the settings cranked up I'm getting between 45-60FPS. ![]() This is a thin and light notebook that cost me less than what it would have cost for an XPS13, and despite running a totally different architecture, OS and requiring lots of translation layers to even run the games, it runs things better than I think they would run natively on the XPS13. I've been using my M1 air for a few days now and it's got to the point where I'm just overwhelmed by the doors this thing is opening. ![]()
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