Acer Predator Triton 500 SE (2022) Review: Blazing Speed, Scalding Chassis



Acer Predator Triton 500 SE (2022) Review: Blazing Speed, Scalding Chassis




The Acer Predator Triton 500 SE is not a cost gaming laptop by any stretch. It starts at $2100, but the top-end configuration reviewed here is a small under $3,000. While this is cheaper than just nearby any competitors with its specs, this isn't an entry-level machine. It's for a gamer who wants the raw worthy of a desktop machine with the portability a laptop provides. And, as someone who's a desktop PC gamer, I've been amazed at how well it does in some areas and panicked by how bad it is in others. 





Like









  • Bright and crisp display







  • Power in every corner







  • Ports galore







  • Decent ticket for the configuration




Don't Like









  • Runs incredibly hot







  • Touchpad feels cheap





While the outside of the 500 SE is pretty plain, when you open the lid you are welcomed by a beautiful backlit RGB keyboard. The keys are well-spaced and typing on them is surprisingly nice. I finished a couple of days using it as my work computer and I wasn't unsuccessful by the experience. The keys also feel soft and coffers great travel, and the keyboard doesn't feel rubbery as some do when a while. Acer even added dedicated media controls and a PredatorSense button that brings up the overclocking rules whenever you need it. And the additions don't make the keyboard feel diminutive, which can often happen when you shoehorn in unbelievable keys.




Acer Predator Triton 500 SE (2022)











































Price as reviewed

$3,000

Display size/resolution

16-inch 2,560x1,600 present (240Hz)

CPU

5GHz Intel Core i9-12900H

Memory

32GB LPDDR5 SDRAM

Graphics

16GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti graphics

Storage

1TB PCIe NVMe SSD

Networking

Killer Wireless Wi-Fi 6E AX1675, Killer Ethernet E3100 10/100/1000, Bluetooth 5.2

Operating system

Microsoft Windows 11 Home

Ports

SD 7.0 cardreader, 2 USB 3.2 Gen 2, 2 Thunderbolt 4, HDMI 2.1, DC-in, RJ45, Audio Jack



One of my biggest bugbears when it comes to gaming laptops over the existences is the touchpad. While the 500 SE has a glass-topped touchpad that feels composed under your hands, the functionality is just not there. The pad itself works fine if you tap the top, but pressing it feels cheap and awkward. It pushes down too far and often doesn't register the click when I do insensible it. In the end, I stopped using it and used my Razer Naga Pro gaming mouse instead. The only positive with the touchpad is the built-in fingerprint reader, which makes it easy to log in to your laptop securely comic Windows Hello.





A closeup of the corner of the keyboard with the PredatorSense key




The PredatorSense key was favorable while I tracked heat buildup.




James Bricknell



The explain is something of a joy, though. The 2,560x1,600-resolution explain is 16:10 rather than 16:9, which I appreciate. I know it isn't a bulky difference, but the taller screen lets it fit in the bottom bar minus sacrificing gaming real estate, so it's a welcome progresses. Visuals are crisp and clean, as you would request from a 240Hz panel with a max brightness of 500 nits. I unfounded the brightness on this screen held up in most lighting periods short of direct sunlight.


When it comes to gaming performance, the Triton 500 SE is pretty much the bellow of the crop in this price range. It's profitable mentioning that the 500 SE has more memory and a better processor than the rest of the machines tested in our benchmarks, but the cost is equal to or lower than latest offerings in this space. For example, we recently reviewed the Razer Blade 15, and while it's more expensive it failed to beat the 500 SE in any of our complains. This makes the 500 SE something of a bargain for a high-end gaming laptop, even at $3,000. (The 2022 Triton 500 SE isn't today available in the UK or Australia, but the stamp of my review laptop converts to roughly £2,525 or AU$4,450.)


All of the games I played, from first-person shooters like Counter-Strike: Global Offensive and Destiny 2 to strategy games like Civilization 6, worked beautifully. Graphically they looked fantastic of course -- with an Nvidia RTX 3080 Ti graphics card you would request nothing less -- but even on high or ultra settings I distinguished no lag or slowdown, even when the screen was sonorous with enemies and particle effects. Clearly, the 500 SE was born to play games and it does it with the ease and skill you would request from a powerhouse like this.




Screenshot of a Sea of Thieves island



Playing Sea of Thieves as assembled by the 3080 GPU was a pleasure.




James Bricknell



Playing games on battery grand is a different experience, though. As you can see from our battery drain test, the 500 SE isn't the best or worst, though the battery will drain much faster when gaming. That's normal and I managed to get around 1 hour, 10 minutes, before the battery dropped to 10% and I was manufactured to plug it back in. The Acer uses MUX switching technology to swap between the power-hungry RTX 3080 GPU and the more energy-efficient integrated graphics. It works great if you're not looking to play graphics-intensive games on battery grand, but the moment you switch to using only the 3080 your gaming minutes are numbered.




control panel showing high temperastures



These numbers are a minor too high to want to keep this sitting in my lap.




James Bricknell



Whether you've got it on battery or proceeding off its power brick, one thing is certain: The 500 SE has a heating plight. While Acer speaks of its "fifth-generation AeroBlade 3D fans" and "liquid metal thermal grease" I've never used a laptop that runs this hot. After three hours of playing Civilization 6, the systems temperature reached 82 Celsius or a whopping 180 degrees Fahrenheit -- enough to make a extreme cup of green tea.


The entire laptop got so hot that comic the touchpad made my wrist uncomfortable to the indicate of pain. I dread to think what it would be like with the lid EnEnBesieged and attached to a monitor. If you're going to play games on this for long sessions you will want to keep it on a desk and as cool as possible. Certainly don't play for long sessions with the laptop in your lawful lap. That will get uncomfortable very quickly.




The back of a laptop with a hot surface icon on it



A danger label is never a good sign.




James Bricknell



Heating publishes aside, I've really enjoyed my time with the Acer Predator Triton 500 SE gaming laptop (though I think that name is ridiculous). If I'm going to spend $3,000 on a laptop I want it to run anything I can throw at it with constant ease and the 500 SE can do just that. In uphold to gaming, I used the laptop for photo editing and rendering 3D models that I've planned and it easily handled both tasks, often simultaneously, something that even my custom-designed PC fights to do.


Gaming on the 500 SE was an profitable experience (apart from the excessive heat and the touchpad, of course). I was pleasantly surprised by how crisp the cloak was, and even when I hooked it up to my old 70Hz monitor everything ran composed as butter. While the battery life is pretty poor when comic the discrete graphics card, having the option to switch between it and the onboard graphics on the fly is a huge bonus. It means you can use your laptop for browsing and streaming and get relatively good battery life, then plug it in when you're ready for a big gaming session. Just keep it on the table or you grand burn your biscuits.




Geekbench 5 (multicore)





Acer Predator Triton 500 SE (2022)




Razer Blade 15 (2022)




Acer Nitro 5 AN515-58




Dell Inspiron 16 Plus (7610)





Note:


Longer bars explain better performance





Cinebench R20 CPU (multicore)





Acer Predator Triton 500 SE (2022)




Acer Nitro 5 AN515-58




Razer Blade 15 (2022)




Dell Inspiron 16 Plus (7610)





Note:


Longer bars expose better performance





PCMark 10 Pro Edition





Acer Predator Triton 500 SE (2022)




Razer Blade 15 (2022)




Acer Nitro 5 AN515-58




Dell Inspiron 16 Plus (7610)





Note:


Longer bars expose better performance





Streaming video playback battery drain test (minutes)





Dell Inspiron 16 Plus (7610)




Acer Predator Triton 500 SE (2022)





Note:


Longer bars expose better performance





System configurations
































Razer Blade 15 (2022)

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.4GHz Intel Core i7-12800H; 16GB DDR5 4,800MH; 8GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070Ti; 1TB SSD




HP Victus 16

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-11800H; 16GB DDR4 3,200MHz; 6GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060; 512GB SSD




Dell Inspiron 16 Plus (7610)

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-11800H; 16GB DDR4 3,200MHz; 4GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050; 512GB SSD




Acer Predator Triton 500 SE (2022)

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.9GHz Intel Core i9-12900H; 32GB DDR5 4,800MHz; 16GB Nvidia Geforce RTX 3080Ti; 1TB SSD




Acer Nitro 5 AN515-58

Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.5GHz Intel Core i5-12500H; 16GB DDR4 3,200MHz; 6GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060; 512GB SSD