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Review: Acer Nitro 17 (2024, AMD)

This gaming laptop has poor battery life but delivers plenty of graphical power at a more-than-reasonable price.
Front view of a slim black laptop fully opened displaying a colorful keyboard
Photograph: Acer
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Rating:

8/10

WIRED
Killer performance across the board. Pricing is hard to beat considering the power here. More than enough ports.
TIRED
Terrible battery life. Iffy screen resolution. Aesthetics remain … divisive at best.

With all the chatter about the artificial intelligence features of Intel’s new Core Ultra CPUs, it’s easy to forget that AMD has been busy doing AI too. AMD has outfitted many of its Ryzen processors with neural processing units (NPUs) since mid-2023, and it’s continued to expand its AI offerings ever since.

Acer’s latest Nitro 17 gaming laptop (model number AN17-42-R9TH) is built atop an AMD Ryzen 7 8845HS, which sits near the top of AMD's product line. If you’re engaging with AI on the desktop, you’ll probably bypass the CPU altogether. With the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 graphics processor in the Nitro 17, everything from gaming to AI image generation gets a significant boost. Aside from the processors, Acer hasn’t exactly pushed the specs to the limit here: 16 GB of RAM and a 1-terabyte solid-state drive are more or less entry-level options today.

That’s just what’s under the hood. On the outside, the Nitro 17 is every bit the beast you are probably expecting, with a 17.3-inch screen (resolution limited to 1,920 X 1,080 pixels), a daunting 34-millimeter thickness, and a weight that tops 6.3 pounds. It is the heaviest and thickest laptop I’ve tested since 2018, and that’s without the power brick (another full pound).

Photograph: Acer

This laptop has been tricked out for gamers—arguably gamers from the ’90s, but gamers all the same. Sharp, angled corners abound from every angle. The screen is spaced away from the back of the laptop by about a centimeter and propped up on a small riser that feels like a separate device bolted on top of the chassis. It’s largely the same design as 2023, minus a few graphical flourishes.

The responsive keyboard rests in a beveled tray, and it’s color-backlit with four tunable zones and a variety of modes that let colors roll across the keys in various patterns. There's a numeric keypad and full-size arrow keys along with custom keys, like a Copilot button and a Nitro key that launches Acer’s NitroSense software, which lets you tune every aspect of the laptop experience. Above the keyboard is a stand-alone button that cycles through four power modes, from Quiet to Turbo, all exactly what they sound like.

A tour around the sides and back of the laptop reveals plenty of ports, including two USB-C ports— one USB 3.2, one USB 4—an HDMI jack, a microSD card slot, a full-size Ethernet adapter, and three USB-A ports—one USB 3.2 and one USB 2.0. Why there’s a crusty old USB 2.0 port on the device I can’t fathom, but with this many connectivity options, it probably doesn’t matter much. Much of the rest of the space around the edges features various vents and grilles for the dual exhaust fans. When they run, which is any time there’s a moderate load on the machine, they can get a bit noisy, though I’ve encountered plenty of louder machines in recent years. I expected more from the speakers on the unit, though they’re fine for casual entertainment and gaming use.

Photograph: Acer

I’ve saved performance for the end because I want to end this review on a high note. The Nitro 17 is a powerhouse that broke records across the board (or approached them in a few cases) on general business apps, AI tasks, and graphics tasks. The GeForce RTX 4060 isn’t quite the top-of-the-line GPU on the market, but it’s no slouch, making short work of any task I threw at it.

The device includes switchable graphics that spin down the GeForce and engage the integrated graphics processor when power isn’t required, or you can configure discrete graphics to stay on (or off) all the time. Oddly, while this significantly impacted performance, it didn’t do much to the Nitro’s battery life. On a YouTube rundown test, I scored three hours and 20 minutes with the GeForce up and running but only 29 additional minutes of running time with it shut off. Either way, battery life is terrible, so you might as well enjoy the graphics boost while the battery is not-so-slowly dying.

The $1,250 asking price is a veritable bargain, and dollar for dollar it represents perhaps the best price-to-performance ratio I have ever seen on a laptop. The somewhat-low screen resolution and poor battery life are my only major concerns here. If you’re looking for top-shelf gaming power and don’t mind the looks and heft of the device, I don’t think you can go wrong with the AMD-powered Nitro 17.

Photograph: Acer