The global gaming market is not in the best position right now. With Bitcoin miners snatching up graphics cards, gamers regularly find themselves paying a premium to build their perfect PC build. Since the GPU shortage isn’t ending any time soon, many gamers are turning to beefy gaming laptops as a replacement. And well, MSI is looking to offer them a complete package with its latest MSI GS66 Stealth 2021 gaming laptop refreshment. It was unveiled with a stunning display, new RTX 30 series graphics, and other features earlier this year. Rivaling Asus’ Zephyrus and Strix series, the MSI GS66 Stealth is a sleek yet mean mobile gaming machine. After using the MSI Stealth GS66 for almost a month now, here is what I think about it.

I have been using the MSI GS66 Stealth as my daily driver for over a month now. My personal usage leans towards a combination of everyday work, entertainment, and gaming. The config of the MSI GS66 Stealth laptop I have been using includes a QHD screen with the GeForce RTX 3080 GPU. So without further ado, jump in and read about my experience:

  • MSI GS66 Stealth Spec SheetUnboxing ExperienceDesign and BuildDisplay

  • Display Work PerformancePerfect for Your Entertainment NeedsGaming on MSI G66 Stealth’s 165Hz Quad-HD PanelPerformance

  • Day-to-Day PerformanceGaming PerformanceBenchmark Test ResultsSoftware: MSI CenterMSI G66 Stealth ThermalsKeyboardTrackpadSpeakers and Audio QualityI/O Ports and ConnectivityBattery and ChargingMSI GS66 Stealth: Pros and Cons

  • Display Work PerformancePerfect for Your Entertainment NeedsGaming on MSI G66 Stealth’s 165Hz Quad-HD Panel

  • Day-to-Day PerformanceGaming PerformanceBenchmark Test ResultsSoftware: MSI Center

MSI GS66 Stealth Spec Sheet

Before I share what’s good and bad about the MSI GS66, take a quick look at the key specifications of this gaming laptop:

Unboxing Experience

We gamers are a breed that loves a sense of showmanship, and in turn, appreciates attractive packaging. So I am pleased to report that MSI’s packaging appealed to me right off the bat. The GS66 Stealth came in a hefty well-packaged box that no doubt protected the laptop against all the dings and knocks. Inside the cardboard box, I first found the laptop’s 230W power adaptor, along with a small box, which housed this mean gaming machine.

Design and Build

The GS66 Stealth gaming laptop is one of MSI’s top-of-the-line products, and it certainly shows. When holding the laptop for the first time, I could feel that it is built-well and has a decent heft to it. The GS66 weighs in at 4.6 lbs (2.1 kgs), which is honestly not bad for a gaming laptop with a large battery and top-end specifications. The MSI GS66’s design and build betray the fact the laptop is made for a segment of gamers who want pure performance without standing out in the crowd.

The design of the laptop is based on a modern and sleek architecture that emphasizes a lower profile while giving the gamer a good feel for the real estate that is there. The entire laptop feels like a single chunk of metal, especially when the lid is closed. However, true to its name, the MSI GS66 Stealth’s outer design doesn’t feature any flashy logos or strips of LED running around the edges. The GS66 is here to be silent and deadly, and that’s what it does.

When you lift the lid, the inner portion of the laptop includes a compact keyboard along with a mesh for cooling up-top. While we will talk about the peripherals later, I am a bit disappointed to see that the laptop’s webcam doesn’t have a privacy shutter, which is becoming more and more common these days. With privacy concerns at an all-time high, the lack of a privacy shutter means I will either need to go out and purchase one or risk myself being recorded.

The MSI GS66 Stealth laptop line comes with a range of display options that range from 4K to Full HD. The variant I’m reviewing comes equipped with a 15.6-inch QHD (2560 x 1440) IPS display with a 165Hz refresh rate. My usage of the GS66’s screen was a mix of work, entertainment, and intense gaming. For the sake of simplicity, I have documented my experience in sections for each scenario. Have a look at it below:

Display Work Performance

Being in a career that requires one to stare at the screen for long periods, it’s almost mandatory for your screen to be sharp and crisp. After using the GS66 Stealth for weeks to type out content and do all my work in general, I am thoroughly impressed by the display quality offered by MSI here.

One of the things besides gaming that I absolutely love is binging Netflix shows, and the display performs perfectly in this scenario as well. The 15.6-inch screen comes with MSI True Color technology and the accompanying software allowed me to calibrate the color settings with ease. However, even without fine-tuning any settings, the experience was amazing.

Watching movies, shows and any other media was extremely detailed. I streamed Netflix content in 4K alongside YouTube’s 1080 videos for contrast and had a nice experience on either side. The color reproduction is accurate, and with the pre-defined display profiles, I could bring out any finer details and colors present in the movies. Whether it was striking hues present in movies and shows like Polar or Rick and Morty, to darker based shows, the screen adapted itself quite nicely.

The brightness control here is apt because it can go low when needed and equally high in other scenarios, making it usable on a sunny day outdoors. I did find the darker shades suffering at the highest brightness, but I will give it a pass since I never use the screen that bright. My time with the MSI GS66’s display while consuming media was more than satisfactory.

While we will discuss the GS66’s gaming performance in detail, this section is a small note on the display. The display held its own very well while I was gaming away on the laptop. Besides the excellent viewing angles and color reproduction, the details were noticeable during my gaming sessions. The high refresh rate coupled with in-game settings worked as advertised, and I was able to get the most out of the 165Hz Quad-HD (2560 x 1440) display.

The MSI GS66 Stealth gaming laptop comes with an 11th-Gen Intel Core i7-11800H CPU, an 8-core processor that clocks in a turbo frequency of 4.60 GHz. Paired with it is the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 Mobile GPU. Since the graphics card has a slimmer form factor for laptops, its power consumption has been dialed down. While the desktop RTX 3080 GPU has a 360 watts TGP, the laptop GPU is confined to a range of low wattages, starting from 80 watts and going up to 150 watts. This review unit, the MSI GS66 11UH, contains an 80 watt GeForce RTX 3080 GPU along with 16GB of 3200Mhz DDR4 RAM to match. For storage, the laptop is outfitted with a 2TB Samsung SSD in the PCIe Gen 4 slot.

Day-to-Day Performance

As I mentioned in brief before, my daily workflow requires me to have multiple tabs of a browser open along with a few other software. I tested the Intel Core i7-11800H CPU’s performance by going about my business but adding a little more to the mix.

It was no doubt made possible by the i7-11800H’s 8 cores, each clocked 4300MHz effective Clock and averaged around 450Mhz for each core in Active Clock in HWiNFO. The integrated Intel graphics chip kept itself at 1500Mhz. The 16 gigs of RAM was at 72% percent usage, and a part of me wished I had a 32GB configuration, but even with this, the laptop did not stutter or lag at all.

The MSI GS66 stealth contains the best of what NVIDIA has to offer right now. The GeForce RTX 3080 has been proven and benchmarked across websites and is loved by gamers the world over. While the PC variant is unfortunately in short stock, I was fortunate to have had this laptop to play around with this powerful GPU.

Now, right off the bat, let me start by saying that it’s fruitless to cross-compare desktop and laptop variants. To make the laptop slimmer, it is obvious that MSI has used the Max-Q GPU variant onboard here. While it certainly makes the machine lighter and slimmer, it naturally reduces performance compared to its desktop counterpart. As I mentioned above, this MSI GS66 review unit has a GeForce RTX 3080 that caps out at a TGP of 95Watts with Dynamic Boost.

Flying across the beautiful and vibrant city of Naples, the GeForce RTX 3080 laptop GPU hit a utilization of 99% at 92Watts (at 1440p resolution and Ultra graphics) and gave me a core clock frequency of around 1300MHz. The CPU sat quietly at 45% percent usage and had more room. Microsoft Flight Simulator averaged around 40 FPS with all the graphics settings topped out, and the gameplay felt smooth even at 40 FPS. I did resort to using a lower resolution and got more FPS, but I feel more power provided to the GPU could have given it that much-needed boost at my original settings.

Even though the RTX 3080 was again fully utilized, I got an average of 88 FPS with my resolution set as 2560 x 1440 and the graphics settings set to Ultra. While the CPU usage hit the 50% mark, it’s obvious it could have done more if the GPU had more headroom. Enough about the lower TGP variant onboard here, let’s take a look at the average FPS of some of the titles I played on this laptop in Ultra graphics and 2560 x 1440 resolution.

Some other games I tested on this laptop are GTA Online, The Ascent, Titanfall 2, and since I got lucky, the Back 4 Blood beta as well. Save for Back 4 Blood, because the beta build was unoptimized, every other game gave satisfactory performances. Titanfall 2 even hit the 144+ FPS mark on max settings. All this performance is without any additional overclocking through software (mentioned below). All things considered, I had a fabulous time gaming on the MSI GS66 Stealth, thanks to the very capable 11th-Gen CPU and RTX 3080 GPU onboard.

While real-world experience is the best way to learn about a laptop’s true potential, the MSI GS66 Stealth didn’t do half bad at benchmark tests. I decided to run 3D Mark’s TimeSpy benchmark to get a score rating. After going through a few cycles of the animation, 3D Mark hit me back with a GPU score of 8478 and a CPU score of 6225. Studying the result further, 3DMark informed me that the score is better than 68% percent of all results which puts the GS66 quite high up there.

The MSI GS66 comes with a pre-installed MSI Center software to help gamers further enhance their experience, and it deserves a quick mention in this review

Built as a way to centralize everything in MSI systems, the MSI Center proved to be a one-stop solution for all my needs. Want to optimize battery life? You have the option to choose between many different profiles. Overclock something? It has it. Advanced noise cancellation or Smart Image Finder? MSI Center has it all. I had tons of fun going through the various feature sets this handy software contains. So if you do end up purchasing the GS66 Stealth, make sure to make the most out of it using this software.

MSI G66 Stealth Thermals

MSI GS66 has a thermal configuration of 3 fans with 7 copper heat pipes packed in a tight environment. The main heat area of the GS66, in my experience, sits right above the WSAD keys as this is where I felt the temperate crank up while I am gaming or using it for general day-to-day use. The laptop’s fans do compensate for that and output all the air hot air through the side vents.

It can get a bit difficult for companies to give a balanced keyboard that every gamer loves. The MSI GS66 Stealth includes a SteelSeries custom RGB keyboard. The keys are chiclet-style and feel flat on impact. As someone who uses Red Mechanical keyboard switches as his primary, the laptop’s keyboard was not so bad.

If you are a gamer who loves the RGB trend every company has hopped on, the GS66’s keyboard features a lot of color profiles that make it come to life. Found under the SteelSeries GG software, these color schemes are useful if you want to make your laptop stand out or have a backlit keyboard in general. I am more of a solid red color kind of guy, and that’s what I outfitted the review unit with. You can, however, also use more RGB features like have audio and keyboard sync, display GIFs on keyboards, and more.

I’m personally not a huge trackpad user. Whenever given a chance, I connect my G305 to the PC/laptop and get to it. However, from my experience with MSI GS66’s trackpad, it’s pretty good. The trackpad itself is considerably wide and covers around 50% of the entire base in totality. Besides having a lot of space, you get your standard left and right buttons. I appreciate the fact that the buttons offer audible tactile feedback, which pairs nicely with the keyboard. While the clicks haven’t been divided by an indicator, it’s easy to distinguish.

Since the trackpad supports Windows Precision drivers, you get all the gestures you could ask for. Hence, my daily use with the GS66’s trackpad was made more simple by easing pinch zooming, scrolling, and other easy gestures. As for gaming, I doubt many of you out there play a shooter with your trackpad, but if you do, it went as well as you would expect it to.

While I don’t use a laptop expecting its speakers to be anything more than decent, the MSI GS66’s dual-speaker setup did manage to punch above my expectations. The dual speakers are placed on the edges on either side of the trackpad. They are easily distinguishable by the Dynaudio logo, the company MSI collaborated with for the tuning of its speaker setup.

When it comes to raw audio power, the speakers did get fairly loud during my test. I listened to my favorite playlist of songs, ranging from standard pop songs to EDM/ bass-heavy stuff. In either case, the speakers did quite well, and I could even hear all the instruments in the famous track ‘Do I Wanna Know?’ by Arctic Monkeys. The bass itself was decent and I could definitely feel it when my hands were on the laptop. You can go on to consume media or play single-player games without headphones, but I recommend against getting into competitive gaming or playing for a large gathering with this speaker setup.

The MSI GS66 Stealth provides an ample amount of I/O ports for gamers to plug their peripherals. The laptop gives you two USB Type-C ports, one of which is a Thunderbolt 4 port with fast data transfer and Power Delivery charging support.

The MSI GS66 Stealth comes with a 99.99WHr battery, which all things considered, isn’t all that bad. However, this section is where a software bug got in the way. My initial battery test drained the laptop’s battery from 100% to 0% in a little over 3 hours. All this while I was performing my standard tasks like routine typing with a few Chrome tabs open and some music in the background.

A bit surprised at this, I investigated and found a bug some MSI GS66 stealth users have faced in the past. It makes the laptop use the primary GPU, in my case, the GeForce RTX 3080, for all its visual tasks. This resulted in unnecessary power wastage and battery drain.

MSI GS66 Stealth (2021): A Rather Pricey Affair

The MSI GS66 gaming laptop packs a solid combination of components. However, as you would have already guessed, it also comes with a hefty price tag of over Rs. 2,00,000. While the RTX 3080 laptop GPU underperforms because of being held back on the TGP front, the MSI GS66 Stealth (starting at Rs. 1,97,500 for the RTX 3070 model) compensates for that with a slim and lightweight build and other amazing features. Gamers looking for a high-end low laptop could definitely check out the MSI GS66 Stealth (2021). Just be aware that there are things like total performance that you need to sacrifice for portability.

PROS:

CONS:

If you are willing to tack on more weight to your laptop without compromising on performance, we suggest you check the MSI GE66 Raider (starts at Rs. 1,99,990) gaming laptop with a higher TGP RTX GPU and an SD card reader. However, if you put the nitpicking aspects aside, the MSI GS66 serves as an excellent if not the best gaming laptop out there. It will definitely last laptop gamers and working professionals for years to come, and I’m probably going to recommend it to casual gamers-cum-professionals.