Testseek.co.uk have collected 56 expert reviews of the Acer Aspire V3-772G and the average rating is 77%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Acer Aspire V3-772G.
August 2013
(77%)
56 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Published: 2013-12-11, Author: Mark , review by: micromart.co.uk
Abstract: Most laptops don't play games well, I accept that. Often the reason is that they don't have enough computing horsepower inside, which isn't a criticism that's easy levelled at Acer's new Aspire V3-772G.Critically, it's built around the new Core i7-4702MQ,...
Upscale metal surfaces, Sturdy design, Gigabit LAN, Simple to maintain, High performance, SSD and HDD, Comparatively low temperatures, Pleasant noise level, Matte display, Great WLAN reception
Display torsionally not very rigid, Display bounces a bit, Only two USB 3.0 ports, Noticeable bluish cast, Viewing angle stability isn't great, Sub-par speakers, High power consumption during idle, Battery life not great
Aside from some minor improvements, the new model is not much different from last year's Acer Aspire V3-772G. The display is slightly brighter, the notebook doesn't get quite as warm, and the gaming performance has increased significantly thanks to the Ge...
Published: 2014-04-25, Author: Brian , review by: pcmag.com
Full HD 17-inch display. Blu-ray optical drive. Both SSD and HDD storage.
Expensive. No touch screen. So-so performance. Some issues with touchpad gesture support. Lots of bloatware. Short battery life
The Acer Aspire V3-772G-9460 is a decent 17-inch desktop replacement laptop with plenty of entertainment options, but it has a few issues we didn't expect to see at this price....
Decent gaming performance for the price, Big, bright matte display, Roomy, comfortable keyboard, Good battery life (for a gaming laptop)
Hard drive is cramped and lacks solid-state cache, Keyboard isn't backlit
The Acer Aspire V3-772G-9402 is a capable if conservatively styled gamer. But its 500GB hard drive is skimpy by gaming PC standards, and there's no SSD cache or backlit keyboard—both features we're coming to expect from rigs in the $1,000 price range...