ggwptech Laptop Benchmarking Methodology

Overview

This benchmarking methodology is designed to evaluate both gaming and non-gaming laptops in a way that balances synthetic testing with real-world scenarios. The goal is to get a big-picture understanding of a machine’s strengths and weaknesses without going too deep into engineering-level metrics.

We use a combination of synthetic benchmarks, real-world applications, gaming tests, and usability metrics. All FPS data and sensor info (CPU/GPU temps, clocks, power draw) are captured via CapFrameX.


Benchmark Suite

Synthetic Benchmarks

  • Cinebench R23
    • Purpose: Multi-core and single-core CPU rendering performance
    • Rationale: Provides insight into how well the CPU handles workloads in creative and productivity tasks
  • PCMark 10
    • Purpose: Measures system performance in productivity tasks such as spreadsheets, word processing, browsing, and video conferencing
    • Rationale: Good for general use scenarios, including office work and multitasking
    • Integration Note: Covers Microsoft Office scenarios (Excel, Word, Outlook)
  • UL Procyon
    • Purpose: Real-world performance testing using actual applications (Microsoft Office, Adobe apps)
    • Rationale: More modern and application-specific than PCMark 10
    • Office Workflows: Uses full Microsoft 365 apps for Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook
    • Photo Editing (Alternative to GIMP): Uses Adobe Photoshop and Lightroom, but results can be used as a proxy for typical photo editing workloads
    • GIMP Note: For Linux or open-source benchmarking, GIMP performance can optionally be tested manually by exporting large files or batch-resizing with timers
  • 3DMark Steel Nomad
    • Purpose: GPU synthetic benchmark
    • Rationale: Measures ray tracing and rasterization performance under a unified, modern workload
  • Battery Eater Pro
    • Purpose: Battery endurance stress test
    • Rationale: Simulates worst-case usage scenario by stressing CPU and GPU simultaneously until battery depletes
  • CrystalDiskMark
    • Purpose: Measures SSD read/write performance
    • Rationale: Fast storage impacts boot time, loading times, and file transfer performance
  • Spyder X Elite
    • Purpose: Display color calibration and gamut coverage measurement
    • Rationale: Important for creatives or users who rely on color accuracy

Gaming Benchmarks

All games tested at native screen resolution (or 1080p as a baseline), using in-game benchmark tools if available or repeated runs on a controlled scene.

  • Rainbow Six Siege X — esports-level FPS, CPU and GPU dependent
  • Doom Eternal — Vulkan performance, fast-paced AAA shooter
  • Armored Core 6 — modern game with fast GPU scenes
  • Baldur’s Gate 3 — heavy CPU and GPU RPG with large scenes
  • Claire Obscur: Expedition 33 — newer title, test for stability and visuals
  • Cyberpunk 2077 — used for both raster and RT testing, high-end AAA
  • Bright Memory Infinite — used primarily for its ray tracing showcase (note: not the best gameplay sample, but ideal for a visually rich RT scene)

Captured via CapFrameX:

  • Average FPS
  • 1% and 0.1% low FPS
  • CPU/GPU temperature and clock behavior
  • Frame time consistency and latency

Real-World Workflows

DaVinci Resolve

  • Render a 4K timeline with basic color correction and transitions
  • Export using YouTube 4K preset
  • Measure render time and export FPS
  • Monitor CPU/GPU usage during export

GIMP

  • Manually test with a 300MB+ PSD or multi-layered image
  • Perform batch resize/export of 50 high-res JPEGs
  • Time the export duration and record CPU usage

Microsoft Office (Already Covered by PCMark 10 & Procyon)

  • Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook operations tested via Procyon’s real-world benchmarking

Scoring & Rubric (1 to 5 Scale)

Categories

  1. CPU Performance
  2. GPU Performance
  3. Storage Speed
  4. Display Quality
  5. Thermals
  6. Battery Life
  7. Productivity Workflows
  8. Gaming Experience

Scoring Interpretation

  • 5 = Excellent — Industry-leading performance for its category
  • 4 = Great — Above average, handles most tasks with ease
  • 3 = Good — Average performance, minor hiccups
  • 2 = Fair — Below average or inconsistent results
  • 1 = Poor — Major bottlenecks or system limitations

How to Score Each Category

  • CPU Performance — Based on Cinebench R23, PCMark 10, and render/export tests
  • GPU Performance — 3DMark Steel Nomad + average FPS on modern games like Cyberpunk 2077 or Doom Eternal
  • Storage Speed — CrystalDiskMark (look at sequential read/write and random 4K QD1)
  • Display Quality — Spyder X Elite data (sRGB/AdobeRGB coverage, brightness, deltaE)
  • Thermals — Recorded via CapFrameX or HWiNFO; throttling = lower score
  • Battery Life — Measured via Battery Eater or real-world usage simulation (YouTube streaming, office work)
  • Productivity Workflows — PCMark 10 + Procyon Office/Photo Editing scores, render/export timing in DaVinci or GIMP

Gaming Experience — Considers both FPS consistency and thermal/clock stability during gameplay