ASUS ROG Strix Scar 17: Design and Closer Look

Moving onto the design of the ROG Strix Scar 17 gaming notebook, the first thing I was drawn to was the plastic finish. Even with the primarily plastic frame it doesn't feel cheap, and it still has a pretty hefty weight sitting at 3 kg without the power brick. At 395.5 x 282 x 23.4 mm (W x D x H) it's by no means a small laptop, either. It's certainly more portable and malleable in where it can be put compared to a desktop. Still, adding 3 KG into a backpack and the enormous power brick will undoubtedly be much more noticeable than, say, a netbook or a notebook like a Razer Blade 14.

We can see it in all its glory by opening up the aluminum lid of the ROG Strix Scar 17. It's certainly a sleek and typically quaint gaming notebook on the surface. It has a customizable RGB keyboard and can be synced up with the RGB lightbar at the front, providing a bit of pop and glow to the underside. The keyboard also feels good, with a bit of feedback and bounce on key presses, although not to the standard of a mechanical keyboard with tactile and clicky switches. Users can customize the RGB LEDs, which are located in a stylish light bar along the bottom, and each key can be customized to a different color as per what the user wants.

The display looks good to the eye and is pretty vibrant. For a 17.3-inch with a 2560 x 1440p (16:9) resolution and a 240 Hz refresh rate, all within an IPS panel, it's certainly good enough for gamers looking to switch to a sleeker and more portable powerhouse. Although 4K is all the rage, it's not a necessity to include, and for a 240 Hz panel, any game outside of well-optimized eSports titles and possibly much older games aren't even going to cut it at such high resolutions. Basically, we're saying here that a 1440p 240 Hz panel with an RTX 4090 and the latest Ryzen 9 7945HX3D is more than acceptable, especially given limitations in the amount of hardware that can be put inside such a small space.

As previously mentioned, ASUS includes a basic 720p webcam along the top bezel, which isn't awe-inspiring. For a 'true' desktop replacement, we would have expected something with a bit more prowess, especially given how popular game streaming is nowadays.

Despite being made primarily from plastic, the top lid is coated with aluminum and, as such, feels premium. Even the hinges connecting the display to the chassis feel good, and we have no fears about reliability or quality issues here. Given the large frame versus say, a 13 or 14-inch notebook, ASUS has put a separate power button above the keyboard, and the dual speakers are housed between the keyboard and the display.

Most of the ROG Strix Scar 17's connectivity is on the rear, with two USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C ports, an HDMI 2.1 video output, and a 2.5 GbE port sandwiched between two air vents. There's also a universal power input for the 330 W AC power brick, which allows users to charge the laptop's battery.

There are no inputs on the right side of the Scar 17, only an air vent, so the remaining connectors are located on the left-hand side, which also has a similar air vent. On the left side are two USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A ports and a 3.5 mm combo audio jack.

There's no denying that the ROG Strix Scar 17 is a stylish and premium-looking gaming notebook, but there's also the fact that ASUS is using a lot of plastic for such an expensive gaming notebook. While it doesn't quite have that elegant and premium feel of a Razer Blade or a MacBook Air, much of ASUS's focus is clearly on delivering performance, and that's understandable.

That's not to say it doesn't 'feel' premium; it's just that for a $3000+ gaming notebook, some users may critique the use of so much plastic. That being said, being a desktop replacement designed to be tethered to a desk instead of a gaming PC, these notebooks typically don't move around as much as ultraportable laptops, so they can be slightly heavier and bulkier and get away with it. 

ASUS ROG Strix Scar 17: Software

Before we get down to the meat and potatoes of the review (the performance), we wanted to highlight the software bundle packaged with the Strix Scar 17. ASUS's software revolves around Armory Crate, which is a plus point, as it rolls everything into one primary application.

The ASUS Armory Crate software provides a multitude of customizations across a variety of areas, including and not just limited to RGB lighting, adjusting and setting fan profiles, setting macro keys, game visuals, and even per-key RGB LED customizations through AURA, which can be synced with other compatible devices too.

Perhaps the most functional and practical area of Armory Crate is the performance modes or the ability to cycle through the performance-enhancing profiles on offer. The first of these is called Ultimate, designed to ramp things up for maximum performance and, consequently, will also use more power. Standard is designed to balance performance when needed while trying to conserve battery life where it can. In contrast, Eco mode is designed primarily to reduce gaming performance, so battery life is prolonged. Depending on the task, the Optimized profile automatically switches between standard and eco modes.

On the following pages, we'll dive into the performance of not only the ROG Strix Scar 17 as it is, but we'll also be looking at how well the AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX3D with 3D V-Cache stacks up in terms of compute and gaming performance.

ROG Strix Scar 17 (2023) Introduction & Specifications System & Storage Performance
Comments Locked

23 Comments

View All Comments

  • PeachNCream - Wednesday, August 23, 2023 - link

    Check Future's other website, Tom's Hardware Guide. They had more time to open and examine the interior of this laptop and from that you may be able to obtain answers.

    I do agree that even relatively modest computer hardware remains relevant and functional for quite a while. If you don't mind dealing with Linux, a Core 2 Duo laptop with Intel 4500MHD graphics is sufficient for everyday, mundane tasks. The graphics processor's lack of support for OpenGL 3.0 or newer will severely limit video games, but something like that can and does chug along in YouTube perfectly well and can help you pay bills, type incoherent nonsense in Discord, and crunch a spreadsheet or run a word processor.

    It doesn't take a genius to figure that out and decide to skip burning cash on any computer. Take games off the table and literally any piece of computing trash is perfectly acceptable and leave you with a fair bit of money to use for food/shelter/clothing/investing/etc. Not sure why people get so wrapped up and desperate to throw away 5% of their before taxes annual income on a toy to play games they'll end up being unhappy with in a year, but humans are idiots and easily exploited by other humans.
  • back2future - Thursday, August 24, 2023 - link

    getting from emotional towards rational/intellectual again, there are always several types of idiotic behavior/attitudes, further gradations/nuances and depending on perspective/aims a different outcome because of this behavior towards different recipients, its always a relative definition

    most of idiotic behavior, guessing, is motivated/originates from reduced/limited awareness/consciousness on surroundings/social&cultural peculiarities, misunderstandings with wrong premise, lacking experience/knowledge/education, naive trust into authorities/media/peer groups/leadership, lock-in phenomenon effects with emotions/customs/tradition/social&generation-based ties, diverse overextension, inadequate priorities, wrong time wrong place or (attempting a general summary) a limiting disorder/dysfunction.

    While rating of useless or unnecessary investments depend on perspective and relation between socially interacting participants, there's value to economical growth from this behavior, furthered through advertisements, public display of status and honor/credit or simply pleasure from (technical) progress.

    Famous and a 'never'(99%) outdated:
    ~1865 "One thing that humbles me deeply is to see that human genius has its limits while human stupidity does not."
    attribution to great astronomer within a book from an influential therapist ~1940s "Two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I am not yet completely sure about the universe.”
    maybe more original "Two things are infinite, as far as we know – the universe and human stupidity."

    for a conclusion, we, the people, are (too) imprecise (again and again, especially true and obvious with retrospective :) and this might be just an idiotic comment as well ;)

    Idling wattage seems being about 27W (with ~230W for gaming loads or ~310-240W with hardware stress testing).
  • Tom Sunday - Saturday, October 14, 2023 - link

    Greetings from Stehekin, WA, USA. Being a simple man on the street and a self-proclaimed Tech-Bro…I will never have a use for a laptop luxury! Constant fiddling with my ‘hobbled together’ Intel i5 Gen 4 desktop is however continuing in holding my interest and needs. All I can actually afford in this station of my life! I love your to the point descriptions as to…modest computer hardware remaining relevant for everyday mundane tasks, chugging along on YouTube and running my free word processor. Those indeed are my life and especially in the persisting challenging economic times like today! As to any serious gaming, these have largely been off the table for me as well, except perhaps for Castle Wolfenstein, Fallout 3 and still living with Mom to making it over the rounds. Someone here earlier spoke about “its always a relative definition”…my definition unfortunately remains fixed in my reality of today and it seems not to waiver even how hard I try in getting away from it!

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now