Having reviewed a number of laptops, it hasn’t been easy to conclude the best laptop for each category and especially when I am asked which one I would get for my own for work purposes, my answer would usually be the default one – the MacBook Air or 13-inch MacBook Pro.
The MSI Prestige 14 changed that after using for a few weeks and I am absolutely in love with what it offers on the table, and the more impressive fact is that it is a machine from a company that focuses heavily on making gaming laptops.
MSI Prestige 14 Video Review
MSI Prestige 14 A10RB Hardware Specifications (as reviewed)
- CPU: Intel Core i7 10710U, 6-Core, up to 4.7GHz
- RAM: 16GB DDR4-2666MHz (up to 32GB with single SODIMM)
- Storage: Western Digital SN730 512GB NVMe SSD
- Display: 14″ Innolux Full HD (1920×1080) 100% sRGB
- GPU: NVIDIA GeForce MX250 2GB GDDR5
- Battery: 4600mAh
The Prestige 14 is extremely well-built with an all aluminum chassis and MSI has added chamfers around the edges that gives it an expensive look, its display hinges are hidden away well and they tilt the keyboard area for an ergonomic typing position when you lift the display.
MSI has always been generous on ports selection and the Prestige 14 is no different, though I am underwhelmed that it has two USB 2.0 ports instead of USB 3.1, it has two USB-C 3.1 ports with both of them supporting Thunderbolt 3, which allows you to connect an external GPU for better graphics performance and power up a 5K display without any issues, you will need new cables or a dongle for connecting USB 3.0 external hard drives or flash drives unless you want to deal with slower transfer speeds.
As a creator and work laptop, the Prestige 14 excels in several hardware aspects, the display panel covers up to 100% of the sRGB color space with decent brightness and viewing angles, the loudspeakers sounds excellent with no distortion when maxed out.
For several weeks, I have not encountered any major performance issues on the Prestige 14, especially I’m doing mostly productivity related such as opening multiple browser tabs, running through data heavy Excel spreadsheets and graphics heavy PowerPoint presentations, it handles them like a champ.
As expected, the Prestige 14’s processor started to throttle as I begin to add effects to my clips, while I’m surprised that the Balance mode didn’t ramp up the laptop’s fan speed despite set to Automatic. Even when fan speed is set to Cooler Boost, it didn’t really improve the situation until I decided to plug in my Akitio Node with a AMD Radeon Vega 64.
Fortunately, the eGPU managed to take 50% load off the CPU and it is able to export my 10 minute 4K video project under 15 minutes.
Synthetic Gaming Benchmarks (AMD Radeon Vega 64, Average FPS)
- Shadow of the Tomb Raider (Highest, AA Off) – 52 fps
- Devil May Cry 5 (Ultra) – 81 fps
- Doom: Eternal (High) – 30 fps
While the Prestige 14 can certainly game with an eGPU, don’t expect it to perform on par or better than a gaming laptop, as you are limited by the transmission bandwidth of Thunderbolt 3. Most games should be playable if they are not too dependent on CPU performance, but nonetheless I advise against using the Prestige 14 for intensive gaming as it heats up terribly.
Using PCMark10’s modern office battery test, I got 4 hours and 17 minutes as it drained from 94% to 16%. In real life situations, I managed to average 5 hours of combined usage in between sessions, which I don’t think is bad although it is way shorter than MSI’s claim of 10 hours per charge, I am usually able to get it charged at the end of the day or conveniently charge it with a USB PD power bank.
The Good
- Powerful ultra-low voltage CPU
- Two Thunderbolt 3 ports
- Great keyboard and trackpad
- Ships with 16GB RAM and fast NVMe SSD
- Same weight as MacBook Air
The Not so Good
- CPU throttles at heavy creative workflows
- Average battery life
- Standard sized USB 2.0 ports instead of USB 3.1
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