
I tested the MSI Titan 18 HX — the power is wild, the price is wilder
MSI, we need to talk.
I see a lot of people fawning over the MSI Titan 18 HX — particularly the Dragon Edition Norse Myth model I've been using as my daily driver over the past couple of months. And in the early days, I was one of them.
It's hard to ignore the ludicrous levels of performance this machine is capable of, thanks to that pairing of the maxed out Intel Core Ultra 9 CPU, top of the line RTX 5090 GPU, and a bonkers amount of RAM with the highest possible wattage pumped through it all. The frame rates in the latest AAA games cranked up to max are insane.
All this comes together in a premium shell with a gorgeous 4K Mini-LED display, a tactile Cherry MX mechanical keyboard and plenty of ports (including blazing fast Thunderbolt 5). On paper, you're ticking the boxes.
However, we need some sort of a reality check here. And that reality check is a $5,000 price tag. Oh, and just to add a little more insult to the potential deathblow to your bank balance, that's for the base configuration — the one I have could cost you nearly seven grand!
For an astonishing price like that, you deserve perfection. But this ain't it, thanks to fans that sound like your standard jet engine, tinny speakers and a haptic touchpad that is pretty frustrating to use.
Then there's my incredibly scientific fun-to-price matrix. How much more PC gaming fun do you actually unlock here for the cost to you? Yes, your games will look their best here, but you can get a near-identical spec from Gigabyte for over $2,000 less — a lower-cost desktop replacement experience.
On top of that, with something like a laptop (especially with DLSS 4 AI trickery), you could afford to go for something like a 5080 or even a 5070, save yourself a ton of cash, and even get a better laptop experience as a whole (looking at you, Asus ROG Zephyrus G14).
I mean even MSI itself is a little cool on the idea of buying this, as a rep told me the company 'doesn't expect to sell a lot of these.' Don't get me wrong — this is a fun experiment to see just what you can pump out of a gaming laptop in 2025. The test results I'm about to show you are crazy good.
But in terms of the choice you make at the store, this is clearly the supercar to lure people into the dealership. It's big, brash, and on paper, the most beastly system I've ever tested. And that is the exact reason why it's not the right choice for a daily driver.
Asus ROG Zephyrus G14
Price
From $5,000
Display
18-inch 4K Mini-LED display 120Hz refresh rate
CPU
Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX
GPU
Up To Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090
Memory
Up to 96GB DDR5
Storage
Up to 6TB
Ports
1x HDMI 2.1, 1x SD card slot, 2.5 Gigabit ethernet, 3x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A, 2x Thunderbolt 5
Connectivity
Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4
Dimensions
15.9 x 12.1 x 1.3 inches
Weight
7.94 pounds
Before we sit down for a real chat, let's go through the superhuman performance going on under the hood, as well as a couple of additional elements that make this sound great (on paper).
Yep, you've got an Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX CPU and RTX 5090 GPU packed in here — combined with a massive amount of DDR5 RAM and a PCIe Gen 5 SSD under the hood.
That's all fair and good, but thanks to all the advanced thermal management going on, you're getting a whopping 270W being pumped through this system from that behemoth of a charging bring. And the end result? A level of gaming performance that is sure to make a lot of desktop rigs blush!
Game benchmark
MSI Titan 18 HX
Asus ROG Strix Scar 18
Cyberpunk 2077 1080p ultra preset (no DLSS)
70.64 FPS
68.28 FPS
Black Myth: Wukond (1080p cinematic)
59 FPS
57 FS
Assassin's Creed Shadows (1080p ver high)
54 FPS
44 FPS
But as you already know full well, we test with all the DLSS 4 trickery turned off. The moment you flick the switches on this, you get the frame rates balloon with very minimal impact to latency and the fidelity of the in-game graphics. Every time I see it, I'm always blown away!
Oh, and it doesn't stop at just gaming performance. One of the big wins for gaming laptops for me is its ability to be all things to all people — a workhorse by day and perfect for play by night.
Well, when you apply these specs to masses of power user multitasking and the most advanced of prosumer and AI workloads, you see just how all these high performance components come together to make this a real stallion of getting things done.
Benchmark
MSI Titan 18 HX
Asus ROG Strix Scar 18
Geekbench 6.4 single-core
3046
3117
Geekbench 6.4 multicore
22082
19553
Geekbench AI ONNX GPU Quantized score
24010
23227
Handbrake (transcoding 4k video to 1080p mm:ss - shorter is better)
01:55
02:16
Complex 4K video timelines in DaVinci Resolve just played instantly at the push of a play button without any rendering requirements. Photoshop neural renders were crushed in just a few seconds.
No matter how much in-game path tracing pressure I put on this, it sailed through with no problems. The fans kick up, though, so make sure you pick up a gaming headset to block it out.
4K mini-LED. That's it. That's the bit.
…OK fine I'll tell you all about it. This 18-inch display is so OTT that I'm in love.
Using mini-LED tech, it's super bright even in direct sunlight, the colors are impressively vivid, and that 120Hz refresh rate is buttery smooth at such a crispy, high resolution.
Whether I'm swinging through the vivid concrete jungle of New York in Marvel's Spider-Man, or feeling the fear of the dark, gloomy immersion in Silent Hill 2, this is a truly mesmerizing screen that really enhances any game you throw at it.
Laptop
Display brightness (average in nits)
DCI-P3 color gamut (%)
MSI Titan 18 HX
729.8
87.2
Asus ROG Strix Scar 18
429.4
80.6
Plus, add in the color accuracy, and I felt just as confident throwing my entire creative workload through here – knowing that whatever I put my heart and soul into; from RAW photo edits to 4K color grading, the on-screen results are correct to what you all would see.
And thanks to that HDR support, contrast-heavy TV shows like the depths of Severance truly make that artificial light glow. For any purpose you throw at it, this screen is a beaut.
So before we talk about the actual aesthetics, I do need to dish out a medal to the Titan for some of its well-thought out design ideas for any pro gamer out there.
Starting with that thickness and heft (yes, it's really is 7.94 pounds) — MSI understood the assignment that this is a desktop replacement and packed it full of what's needed for almost superhuman thermal management (for a laptop).
Yes, the fans do sound like a jumbo jet when pushing it to the limit, but it's the best of the cards you're dealt in this situation! On top of that, the desktop convenience extends to the port array, as important sockets like HDMI and Ethernet adorn the back, while there's a good versatility across the other sides (such as a warmly welcomed full-size SD card slot).
And finally, a lot has been said about giving gamers the opportunity to expand their laptops. While we haven't gone full-blown modular just yet, the extra SSD slots with PCIe Gen 5 support are significant for expanding capacity while keeping the speeds up.
Oh, and shoutout to that phenomenal Cherry MX mechanical keyboard up top. The keys have a nice subtle dish to them for your fingers to fall into, while the tactile switch impact is unmatched in the laptop space.
This is an intervention, MSI. You can tick boxes, and that's a good thing — I don't want that to be forgotten. But we're giving consumer advice here, and I've got to be real: there are two big reasons why you shouldn't buy this.
And no, neither are the laughable battery life or webcam. Let's just agree these don't matter in a desktop replacement system like this.
MSI gives with one hand and takes away with the other. That's annoying because given the ridiculous cost you're paying here (more on that later), There are three key issues going on.
First, that haptic touchpad. Looks great with the RGB illumination and if my MacBook Pro was anything to go by, solid state pads are great at giving you that tactility without that spongey wobble. On the Titan, there's a nice clicky snap, but gestures are hit and miss and click response is too slow.
Second, the speakers. If you're going to have the fans kick up a storm, let those social gaming moments drown out the noise with big volume from those speakers. Not only are they unfortunately pretty tinny, but they're far too quiet.
And finally (most subjectively), that dragon artwork on the front of mine? Pretty cringe. I won't hold this against the 18 HX in my review, as you can get the plain one which solves that problem.
On top of that, I applaud MSI for trying to do something different — the texture of the 3D artwork atop the lid is addictive to run your fingers over.
But I would never ever feel comfortable bringing this out with me, as I learnt after being laughed at a fair few times in my local hometown pub for whipping it out. Maybe keep the special editions a little more subtle.
Here I was thinking $4,499 for the Asus ROG Strix Scar 18 was crazy expensive. But it turns out that when it comes to 18-inch 5090 laptops, it could very well be the steal of the year.
I won't blather on too much in this section, because every time I do I get more annoyed at that $7,000 price tag. Yep, you read that right — the cost of the special edition model I have is seven grand.
But how much does that price go down if it's the non-special edition? Well, looking at retailers, around about $250 gets cut off the price, as we've seen the identical spec with none of the dragon stuff go for $6,750. No matter which way you look, this is an insane price tag that I cannot ignore.
Then of course, we've got Nvidia talking about raising the prices of its GPUs due to the economic uncertainty, so they may go even higher!
This is just an astronomical price to pay, and one that given the combo breaker strengths of DLSS 4 and multi-frame gen can bring to uber smooth laptop gaming on lower-spec laptops, I wouldn't recommend anyone pay.
The epitome of excess, and the image you'd find on the Wikipedia page for the saying 'more money than sense.' This is a beasty gaming laptop with a monstrous price tag that makes it good on paper, but not something I'd tell anyone to go out and buy.
If 5090 is your thing, the Strix Scar 18 is better value for money (nearly $2,000 less) without compromising anymore than a few frames per second. But you could legitimately get away with RTX 5080 and 5070 systems, save yourself a ton of money and still get shockingly good frame rates with all that AI trickery.
Don't get me wrong. The MSI Titan 18 HX is not exactly taking your money and setting it on fire. It is a mightily powerful system, but definitely not the smartest purchase — certainly not the best gaming laptop you can buy.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Your next iPhone could cost substantially more — Trump threatens 25% tariff
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. President Donald Trump really wants Apple to make iPhones in the United States. Apple attempted to get around the tariffs on goods made in China by moving much of its iPhone manufacturing to India. However, that doesn't appear to be good enough for the President, as he said he would impose "a Tariff of at least 25%" on iPhones made outside of the country. "I have long ago informed Tim Cook of Apple that I expect their iPhone's that will be sold in the United States of America will be manufactured and built in the United States, not India, or anyplace else," Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform (typos included). "If that is not the case, a Tariff of at least 25% must be paid by Apple to the U.S. Thank your for your attention to this matter!" Trump recently posted that he "had a little problem with Tim Cook," in response to the Cupertino-based company moving production to India instead of the U.S. Currently, goods made in India are subject to the 10% import tariff that applies to all countries. This is substantially lower than the 30% tax applied to goods from China. Presumably, if Trump imposes a 25% additional tariff on iPhones imported to the U.S., it would be on top of the 10% already there. He said, "at least," which means the fee to import iPhones could be even higher. There's a lot of uncertainty for Apple about importing iPhones to the U.S. While it might be unrealistic to move all production stateside, it may also be the only way Apple can avoid massive fees — fees that will inevitably be passed onto consumers looking for one of the best iPhones. I pixel-peeped the world's fastest gaming monitor — after testing 610Hz, real-life feels laggy I tested the MSI Titan 18 HX — the power is wild, the price is wilder I played 5 games on the RTX 5060 — is this budget GPU actually enough?


Tom's Guide
2 days ago
- Tom's Guide
Nvidia's rumored gaming laptop APU just spotted in new leak — what we know
The gigantic Computex convention just ended, but some things were missing from the overstuffed event, including Nvidia's first-ever consumer-grade laptop CPU. Nvidia showcased a lot at Computex 2025, including an RTX-powered AI avatar and several RTX 5060 laptops and desktops. MSI even showcased the MS-C931, which features the Nvidia GB10 ARM 'superchip', but that is meant for AI applications and not for everyday use. Unfortunately, we didn't see the rumored gaming laptop APU. Instead, our first look is coming from the YouTuber Moore's Law is Dead, who highlighted the APU in a recent video. In the video (around 40 minutes), Moore's Law shows an image of the new APU that is purportedly an engineering sample of the new silicon, attached to at least eight memory modules. The sample hints at an AMD Strix Halo-esque configuration with an onboard iGPU and a TDP of 80 to 120 watts. Likely, Nvidia's APU will be on an ARM device with a CPU allegedly developed by MediaTek. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. This type of integrated build is likely to be the future of gaming laptops. We can see how well it works with the AMD APU in the Asus ROG Flow Z13. There, we see that dedicated graphics have been ditched in favor of an integrated powerhouse in the Ryzen AI Max 390. Beyond powerful graphics, having it all integrated and quick access to LPDDR means that laptops utilizing this silicon will be more battery efficient, something gaming laptops have lacked until now. Plus, it builds toward a stronger handheld gaming experience as more handheld gaming PCs are likely to feature this kind of architecture. For another hint, the Nintendo Switch 2, which launches next week on June 5, features a custom Nvidia Tegra chip that has already shown how DLSS can extract higher performance out of games. According to the Moore's Law source, the Nvidia APU is expected to launch either late this year or in early 2026, which aligns with previous rumors that suggested we would see this new APU in 2025.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Motorola Solutions (MSI) Acquires Silvus Technologies for $4.4 Billion
On Wednesday, May 28, Motorola Solutions Inc. (NYSE:MSI) announced its acquisition of privately held Silvus Technologies Inc., a wireless radio manufacturer specializing in MIMO (Multiple Input, Multiple Output) communication technology. The all-cash deal is valued at $4.4 billion. Silvus was previously owned by private equity firm TJC (earlier known as The Jordan Company), which acquired it in 2019. In addition to the cash consideration, certain Silvus employees holding equity will receive $20 million in restricted stock. The deal also includes a potential performance-based payout of up to $600 million, contingent upon achieving specific performance metrics during consecutive 12-month periods ending in 2027 and 2028. Ken Wolter / According to Bloomberg data, this marks Motorola's only billion-dollar-plus acquisition in the past decade, despite the company completing around 40 acquisitions over that period. This underscores Motorola's conviction in Silvus' capabilities and the strategic value of its technology. The acquisition is particularly timely amid rising global conflicts, where demand for secure, resilient communication technologies is accelerating. Silvus' mobile ad-hoc networking (MANET) technology enables decentralized, infrastructure-free communication, a key advantage in mission-critical and frontline situations. Motorola believes Silvus will strengthen its existing portfolio and expand its offerings to military, law enforcement, and commercial clients. The combination of Silvus' cutting-edge engineering with Motorola's global scale aims to deliver more advanced and secure solutions across various industries. Motorola Solutions is a global technology, communications, and security company. It provides high-tech security and mission-critical communication products for businesses and governments. While we acknowledge the potential of MSI as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than MSI and that has 100x upside potential, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: The Best and Worst Dow Stocks for the Next 12 Months and 10 Unstoppable Stocks That Could Double Your Money. Disclosure: None. Sign in to access your portfolio