Here’s a quick list of all the available gaming laptops in Nepal alongside their latest price in Nepal as of 2025.
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Clarify your budget. Know what you can spend and stick to it. There might always be something a bit more appealing a bit out of your budget so it’s important to set boundaries. As per your needs and wants, set a budget threshold and stick to it. We recommend keeping a comfortable range and then a max upper ceiling. Say, you want a lower-mid-range gaming laptop and are comfortable spending about 1.2 lakhs on it. Your range will hover around 1.2-1.4 lakhs and your upper ceiling might reach 1.45 lakh. At that point, you should have a clear distinction of the offerings available in that range and you’ll have fewer picks to decide between. Failure to do this will have you second-guessing your purchase or wandering between a range of models without clarity of thought.
Gaming laptops typically ship with ‘H’, ‘HS’, or ‘HX’ series CPUs from Intel and AMD. All three often suffice for gaming needs but a stronger CPU will likely give you better FPS in CPU-heavy games like Counter-Strike or Valorant. Sticking to 12th gen Intel (or newer) and Zen 3+ architecture chips from AMD (or newer) will be your best bet for performance and longevity. But be sure to pick a suitable CPU/GPU combo to not bottleneck one or the other.
The GPU is arguably the most important component in a gaming laptop and choosing one over the other can have significant deviations. First of all, decide between the series. Since AMD and Intel dGPUs are a little far and few in between, you can often neglect these options in the context of the Nepalese market. After that, you are left deciding between the different series from NVIDIA: the RTX 20, RTX 30, and RTX 40 series.
The RTX 2050 is an entry-level card with few CUDA cores and limited VRAM, so it’s only good if you want to get your hands wet and have a try at PC gaming. From the RTX 30 series, the 6GB RTX 3050 is the most popular today, while other cards like the RTX 3060, 3070, and higher were phased out by their RTX 40 counterparts. So, your only true options for a brand new gaming laptop in 2025 are the RTX 2050, RTX 3050, and the RTX 40 series cards. So, which one should you get?
For starters, if you don’t need a lot of power, and can’t or don’t want to spend a ton, an RTX 2050 with a strong CPU will run modern games but not without issues. So, an RTX 3050 card is a more appealing option for an entry-level budget gaming rig. That guy should be able to run even the more demanding modern titles at low-medium settings with playable frame rates. But depending on the pricing ladder, an RTX 4050 card might be a better snatch because of its few unique quirks like DLSS 3 support with Frame Generation.
Anything higher like a RTX 4060 or RTX 4070 is relatively expensive in Nepal. But the RTX 4060 is a good deal for around that 2 lakh mark and offers about 20-30% better performance than the 4050 depending on the settings and resolution. The RTX 4070, 4080, and 4090 are high-powered cards for gaming at 1440p or higher with all the bells and whistles like Ray Tracing and such. So, if you are aiming for those, you likely already know what you’re getting out of the purchase. If not, then they might not be the right pick for you and you can likely get away with a lower-tier graphics card.
Gaming laptops generally ship with fast IPS screens and focus on minimizing response times. Hence, you should look at getting one that’s 144Hz + and has a marketed GtG response time of less than 10ms. Other aspects like color coverage, delta, and brightness are also important factors but you should consider them secondary for a gaming laptop. Some expensive machines also ship with mini-LED screens that have better response times, darker blacks, and higher peak brightness.
As for the memory, it’s recommended to get at least 16GB of dual-channel RAM and an NVME SSD for gaming. DDR4 and DDR5 RAM should suffice and a Gen 3 or Gen 4 SSD are also pretty common. But depending on the number of games you have, you might want to invest in a second SSD or hard drive to store all your games.
You may or may not get a good keyboard with RGB since there’s always the option for separate input devices. Aspects like speakers, microphones, and webcams are secondary as well but do pay attention to ports and their generations as newer ports generally have higher bandwidth which might come in handy pushing external displays and such. At the end of the day, choose a gaming laptop that matches your needs and can play the games that you want at the FPS you desire. If you have a little headroom, expanding memory, or picking a better build will fare you well in other aspects of use but if raw performance is all that you are looking for, there are plenty of bang for your buck deals in the gaming laptop space.