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Origin PC Eon17-S (2014) review: A massive gaming laptop selling support and speed

The Origin PC Eon17-S is one of our go-to big-screen gaming laptops, even if the look is getting dated.

Dan Ackerman Editorial Director / Computers and Gaming
Dan Ackerman leads CNET's coverage of computers and gaming hardware. A New York native and former radio DJ, he's also a regular TV talking head and the author of "The Tetris Effect" (Hachette/PublicAffairs), a non-fiction gaming and business history book that has earned rave reviews from the New York Times, Fortune, LA Review of Books, and many other publications. "Upends the standard Silicon Valley, Steve Jobs/Mark Zuckerberg technology-creation myth... the story shines." -- The New York Times
Expertise I've been testing and reviewing computer and gaming hardware for over 20 years, covering every console launch since the Dreamcast and every MacBook...ever. Credentials
  • Author of the award-winning, NY Times-reviewed nonfiction book The Tetris Effect; Longtime consumer technology expert for CBS Mornings
Dan Ackerman
7 min read

Leave the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One to living-room gamers who forgive their favorite game consoles for not hitting 1080p resolutions. The current breed of 17-inch gaming laptops, all powered by Nvidia's 800-series mobile graphics cards, can leave any living-room console in the dust, and have enjoyed something of a renaissance this year, with excellent performance, a good selection of new high-end games, and even new features and designs.

8.2

Origin PC Eon17-S (2014)

The Good

The Origin PC Eon17-S combines powerful, flexible configurations with top-level personalized tech support, and the latest Intel and Nvidia components.

The Bad

High-end configurations can get expensive quickly, and the thick off-the-shelf chassis looks more dated than ever. No touch or higher-res screen options.

The Bottom Line

The big-screen Origin PC Eon17-S gaming laptop won't win any design contests, and isn't particularly portable, but our high-end config was great where it counted -- running new games at high detail settings.

Two gaming

s we've tested recently combine parts of this new gaming laptop landscape with big, chunky bodies that feel increasingly dated. You'll be forgiven for thinking you're seeing double when the Origin PC Eon17-S and Digital Storm Krypton are side by side, as both are built around the same Compal chassis (that's a Taiwanese company known for making tech hardware for clients including Toshiba, Acer, and others), each slightly customized to reflect their respective brands.

Both of these 17.3-inch

have similar specs (to a point), and both are also highly configurable with a variety of options for processors, storage, and graphics. Many of our impressions of the design and feel of these two laptops will be similar, but in this case, we're going to focus on the Origin PC version.

The Eon17-S has the same name as the past couple of generations of this product line. The most recent similar model we reviewed was a slightly different Eon17-SLX , which used an even bulkier body to fit in dual graphics cards.

Price and availability of specific components can shift in build-to-order systems, but our test unit came out to $3,505 here in the US, and would run for £2,258 in the UK and AU$4,326 in Australia, which is a hefty investment, even for hardcore gamers.

Why the price difference between two similar-looking 17-inch gaming laptops? Both have 16GB of RAM, the current Nvidia GeForce 880M GPU, and a combination of SSD and HDD storage (and you can adjust the level of storage to suit your budget). The big price difference comes from the CPU. Our Origin Eon17-S just happens to use a very expensive CPU you don't see very often (and that choice didn't seem to have a big impact on our gaming experience, either).

While both systems have Intel Core i7 CPUs from the current Haswell generation, the Origin PC has an MX, or "extreme" edition chip (the Core i7-4940MX), while the Digital Storm has an MQ chip, just a basic high-end quad-core chip. That adds more than $900 to the cost, versus a more common Core i7, and if you configured the Eon17-S with a same CPU as the Digital Storm, its price drops down to around $2,600.

Confused yet? No one said buying a build-to-order gaming PC was easy. Especially because you also have to consider the intangibles beyond the physical chassis and internal specs. With Origin PC, you're paying a premium for that company's high level of personalized service and support. The company was founded by former Alienware guys (from the pre-Dell days), and offers lifetime tech support, in the form of access to phone or email assistance, and labor on future upgrades and repairs is free. You'll have to consider how important that personal touch is, as it does cost extra compared to other vendors offering the same components.

In hands-on use, I found that both of these 17-inch laptops performed excellently when playing games, and there's always something nice about being able to set detail levels to "ultra" in games. Neither is going to win any beauty contests. If I were to spend $2,000 to $3,000 or more on a laptop, I admit I'd be pretty disappointed in not getting a slick show-off-ready body, especially with slimmer models, such as the MSI Stealth and Razer Blade 17, making inroads as high-design gaming laptops, even if they can't yet match the performance of a desk-hogging monster like the Eon 17-S.

Origin Eon17-S (2014)Alienware 17 (2014)Digital Storm Krypton
Price as reviewed $3,505 $2,967 $2,240
Display size/resolution 17.3-inch, 1,920 x 1,080 screen17.3-inch, 1,920 x 1,080 screen17.3-inch, 1,920 x 1,080 screen
PC CPU 3.1GHz Intel Core i7 4940MX2.9GHz Intel Core i7 4910MQ2.8GHz Intel Core i7 4810MQ
PC memory 16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz
Graphics Nvidia GeForce GTX 880MNvidia GeForce GTX 880MNvidia GeForce GT 880M
Storage (2) 120GB SSD 750GB 7,200rpm HDD256GB SSD 1TB 5,400rpm HDD256GB SSD, 750GB 7,200rpm HDD
Optical drive DVD-RWBD-ROMBD-ROM
Networking 802.11ac wireless, Bluetooth 4.0 802.11a/b/g/n wireless, Bluetooth 4.0 802.11ac wireless, Bluetooth 4.0
Operating system Windows 8.1 (64-bit)Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit)Windows 8.1 (64-bit)

Design and features

The actual chassis of the current Eon17-S differs somewhat from both the larger Eon17-SLX we reviewed last year and the similar-size Eon17-S we reviewed before that. But you'd still be hard-pressed to tell the difference at a glance. All are big, black, and boxy, and might have dropped onto a gamer's desk during any point in the past five or six years.

That's because this is essentially an off-the-shelf laptop case of the type that boutique PC makers such as Origin PC buy and then fill with custom components. You're still stuck with a thick, heavy machine that doesn't feel as if it was designed from the ground up for gamers, although Origin PC adds a handful of physical customization tweaks for character.

There's a custom A-panel, which is the panel covering the back of the lid. It's sculpted and angular, reminiscent of older Alienware laptops, and comes in a variety of custom colors. Your choice of red, black, or white is included, while other colors and designs run from $175 to $300.

A circular Origin PC logo is backlit on the touch pad, and it's a nice visual touch that gives the system a bit more of a custom feel. Although the nearly identical Digital Storm Krypton does the same thing, with its own logo backlit on the same touchpad.

The key faces on the not-quite-island-style keyboard are widely spaced, but the base of each key is wider and nearly touches its neighbor. The large keys are great for WASD gaming, but Alienware's soft-touch keyboard has a better overall feel. Every gaming laptop keyboard seems to feel the need to be backlit these days. In the Eon17-S, you can set three different zones with different colors under the keyboard, plus a separate zone for the touchpad. Alienware's system is somewhat more polished, with more zones and options, but overall, I like the look of Lenovo's Y50 Touch backlit keyboard the best.

The display is a key component for a gaming laptop (and one area the otherwise excellent Lenovo Y50 falls down on). This 17.3-inch screen here has a native resolution of 1,920x1,080 pixels, which is the longtime standard for multimedia and gaming PCs, although some systems are boldly moving past that into 4K (or close to it) territory.

The screen on the Eon17-S has a matte finish, and includes a 45-day "no dead pixel" guarantee, allowing you to get a repair or replacement for any dead pixels, which is exactly the type of expanded coverage more mainstream vendors don't offer. Off-axis viewing is excellent, and there's little to no screen glare. Still, a more modern-looking system might have an edge-to-edge display, rather than a thick plastic screen bezel sticking out.

Audio from the branded Onkyo speakers is loud, and gets an additional kick from from a small subwoofer on the bottom panel. It's the same setup, including the Onkyo logo, as found on the Digital Storm Krypton, but I'm still a fan of good-quality headphones for a more immersive gaming experience.

Ports and connections

Origin PC Eon17-S
Video HDMI, DisplayPort, mini-DisplayPort
Audio Stereo speakers w/subwoofer, headphone/microphone/line-in/S/PDIF jacks
Data 3 USB 3.0, 1 USB 2.0, SD card reader
Networking Ethernet, 802.11ac Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
Optical drive Blu-ray player/DVD burner

Connections, performance, and battery

If you're looking for three distinct video outputs, you're not going to find that in too many other laptops. Here, you get HDMI plus both full-size and mini-size DisplayPort connections. Interestingly, the slim 15-inch MacBook Pro has a similar setup, with HDMI and dual mini-Display Ports.

We've previously gone over the very expensive options, including a large SSD and "Extreme" edition Intel Core i7, that make the configuration we tested so expensive. But if you're looking to spend as little as possible, the entry price for this system is $1,630, which includes an Intel Core i5 4340M CPU, 4GB of RAM, a 320GB HDD, and Nvidia's GeForce 860M GPU. But I can't imagine that anyone interested in one of these systems would be happy with the gaming performance you'd get from a configuration like that.

The Origin PC and Digital Storm Krypton traded top scores in our benchmark tests with a recent Alienware 17, all three featuring high-end Intel Core i7 processors and Nvidia GeForce 880M graphics. Note that these tests are built around more mainstream use, and the extra-expensive MX-level processor in the Eon17-S didn't do much for us in these basic Photoshop and video encoding tests.

In our gaming tests, these systems were also closely matched. In our challenging Metro: Last Light test, at 1,920x1,080 resolution and high/ultra settings, the Eon17-S ran at 27.3 frames per second, versus 25.3 for the Alienware and 27.0 for the Digital Storm Krypton. In BioShock Infinite, also at 1080p/high settings, the Eon17-S ran at 82.6fps, versus 80.9 for the Krypton and 80.3 for the Alienware. With the exception of dedicated gaming desktops, this is about as high-end as gaming PCs get right now, at least until the next generation of Intel and Nvidia parts, which are expected later this year (but even then, it'll be some time until that new tech is readily available).

Conclusion

There were few, if any, surprises from the Origin PC Eon17-S, but with the company's excellent reputation for quality and support, that's not a bad thing. Sure, it's still ugly, but we saw amazing performance in applications and games, and the options for building a version to suit your budget and expectations are numerous.

There's a premium price to be paid, but you also get a lot of behind-the-scenes services, from hands-on tech support to custom paint jobs to a no-dead-pixel policy. We've reviewed several Origin PC systems over the past several years, and never had a problem with any of them, even ones with overclocked parts, which is not something we can say about many PC makers.

Find more shopping tips in our Laptop Buying Guide.

HandBrake multimedia multitasking test (in seconds)

MSI GS70 Stealth 169Origin Eon17-S (2014) 163Alienware 17 (2014) 162Digital Storm Krypton 160
Note: Shorter bars indicate better performance

Adobe Photoshop CS5 image-processing test (in seconds)

Alienware 17 (2014) 194MSI GS70 Stealth 183Digital Storm Krypton 178Origin Eon17-S (2014) 170
Note: Shorter bars indicate better performance

Apple iTunes encoding test (in seconds)

MSI GS70 Stealth 88Digital Storm Krypton 81Alienware 17 (2014) 77Origin Eon17-S (2014) 77
Note: Shorter bars indicate better performance

Video playback battery drain test (in minutes)

Digital Storm Krypton 169Origin Eon17-S (2014) 183MSI GS70 Stealth 219Alienware 17 (2014) 221
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

BioShock Infinite gaming test (in frames per second)

MSI GS70 Stealth 67.63Alienware 17 (2014) 80.32Digital Storm Krypton 80.94Origin Eon17-S (2014) 82.62
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

Metro: Last Light gaming test (in frames per second)

MSI GS70 Stealth 16Origin Eon17-S (2014) 27.3Alienware 17 (2014) 25.33Digital Storm Krypton 27
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

High-end gaming battery drain (in minutes)

Origin Eon17-S (2014) 49Digital Storm Krypton 50Alienware 17 (2014) 56MSI GS70 Stealth 64
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

System configurations

Origin EON17-S (2014)

Windows 8.1 (64.bit); 3.1GHz Intel Core i7-4940MX; 16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1600MHz; 8192MB Nvidia GeForce GTX 880M; RAID 0 (2) 120GB SSD, 750GB 7,200rpm HDD

Alienware 17 (2014)

Windows 7 Home Premium (64.bit); 2.9GHz Intel Core i7-4910MQ; 16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1600MHz; 6144MB Nvidia GeForce GTX 880M; 256GB SSD, 1TB 5,400rpm HDD

MSI GS70 Stealth

Windows 8.1 (64.bit); 2.5GHz Intel Core i7-4710HQ; 16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1600MHz; 6144MB Nvidia GeForce GT 870; RAID 0 (3) 128GB SSD, 1TB 7,200rpm HDD

Digital Storm Krypton

Windows 8.1 (64.bit); 3.1GHz Intel Core i7-4810MQ; 16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1600MHz; 8192MB Nvidia GeForce GTX 880M; 256GB SSD, 750GB 7,200rpm HDD

8.2

Origin PC Eon17-S (2014)

Score Breakdown

Design 6Features 8Performance 9Battery 7