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ASUS TUF Gaming A15 Gaming Laptop, 15.6” FHD 144Hz, 100% sRGB Display, GeForce RTX 4060, AMD Ryzen 5 7535HS, 16GB DDR5, 512GB PCIe SSD, Wi-Fi 6, Windows 11, FA507NV-EH53

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Arrives Jun 28 – Jul 2
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Style: 15.6” FHD | RTX4060 | Ryzen 5


Features

  • READY FOR ANYTHING - Jump right into the action with Windows 11, an AMD Ryzen 5 7535HS processor, and an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Laptop GPU (up to 140W with Dynamic Boost).
  • NEVER MISS A MOMENT Keep up with the pros, thanks to its fast FHD 144Hz display with 100% sRGB color. Adaptive sync tech reduces lag, minimizes stuttering, and eliminates visual tearing for ultra-smooth and lifelike gameplay.
  • MUX SWITCH WITH ADVANCED OPTIMUS - A MUX Switch increases laptop gaming performance by 5-10% by routing frames directly from the dGPU to the display bypassing the iGPU. With Advanced Optimus the switch between iGPU and dGPU becomes automatic based on the task, optimizing battery life.
  • BLOW AWAY THE COMPETITION The A15 is equipped to handle the high-power CPU with dual 84-blade Arc Flow Fans, enhancing cooling performance without added noise.
  • MILITARY GRADE TOUGHNESS To earn the TUF Gaming name, these laptops must pass rigorous military-grade testing for resistance to drops, vibrations, and extreme temperatures under the MIL-STD-810H* standard, ensuring their quality and durability.

Description

Raise your game and carry your squad with the new ROG Strix G18, a powerful gaming laptop that features Windows 11, a 14th Gen Intel® ™ processor, and an NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 4080 Laptop GPU. With DDR5-5600MHz memory and PCIe® 4x4 in RAID 0, this laptop is designed to provide lightning-fast performance and minimize loading times while the ROG Intelligent Cooling system, featuring upgraded liquid metal on the CPU and Tri-Fan Technology, ensures optimal performance over extended gaming sessions. The ROG Nebula Display guarantees a premium visual experience, and the MUX Switch with Advanced Optimus optimizes both gaming performance and battery life. The laptop's design is inspired by cyberpunk aesthetics and graffiti accents, featuring unique elements such as a dot matrix design on the lid and cross-hatched vents.

Brand: ASUS


Model Name: FA507NV-EH53


Screen Size: 15.6 Inches


Color: Black


Hard Disk Size: 512 GB


CPU Model: Ryzen 5


Ram Memory Installed Size: 16 GB


Operating System: Windows 11 Home


Special Feature: Backlit Keyboard


Graphics Card Description: Dedicated


Standing screen display size: ‎15.6 Inches


Screen Resolution: ‎1920 x 1080 pixels


Max Screen Resolution: ‎1920x1080


Processor: ‎4.55 GHz ryzen_5


RAM: ‎DDR5


Hard Drive: ‎512 GB SSD


Graphics Coprocessor: ‎NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060


Chipset Brand: ‎AMD


Card Description: ‎Dedicated


Wireless Type: ‎802.11ax


Number of USB 3.0 Ports: ‎2


Brand: ‎ASUS


Series: ‎FA507NV-EH53


Item model number: ‎FA507NV-EH53


Operating System: ‎Windows 11 Home


Item Weight: ‎8.76 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎13.94 x 0.88 x 9.88 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎13.94 x 0.88 x 9.88 inches


Color: ‎Black


Processor Brand: ‎AMD


Number of Processors: ‎6


Computer Memory Type: ‎DDR5 RAM


Flash Memory Size: ‎16 GB


Batteries: ‎1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included)


Date First Available: October 10, 2024


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Jun 28 – Jul 2

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Solid laptop that mixes productivity and gaming.
Style: 15.6” FHD | RTX3050 Ti| i7
This laptop is for someone who wants a laptop to take around and do productive work on and also play modern games at high settings. There are others with faster GPUS, but hardly any that can claim 6-9 hours of battery life like this one. There are tons of battery saving features, like a dedicated key to change what power profile to use. The 144hz screen auto sets to 60hz on battery so save battery life. Gaming on a AAA game at high settings, 30 fps, I get around 2-3 hours of battery life. Less demanding games can go more. Other contemporary laptops i've used can really only game for an hour or so while on battery. You can also set the battery life to be capped at 80% or 60% to extend it's usable life. I usually keep it on 80% and still have long battery life. And it comes in at a hell of a competitive price. #CPU The cpu is a bit lacking when compared to other 6-8+ core laptops, but it's a good tradeoff for the lower TDP (and less power consumption). It is more than capable for most peoples work though. It cannot be undervolted like any new intel chip, which I did not know until researching it. #GPU The 3050ti has been able to run any game I throw at it on high settings, and older games can be ran easily on my 4k monitor and the native 4k resolution. It can get fairly loud when gaming at high performance for awhile, I game with headphones so I don't notice it when i take them off. But this will be an issue for really any gaming laptop, especially one this thin. #Ports Thunderbolt 4 can be connected to external docks and external GPUS. Allows 100w usb c charging so you can run laptop off one cable, but keep in mind this is less than the 180wpower brick, and if you are gaming at high performance, it will slowly drain the battery unless you also have the power cable connected. I also got a 50$ external 20000 mah battery with 65w usb charging which can bring the laptop from 10-80%. Nice! It is annoying how the ports are all at least half way down the machine, as the top half is for the fan outputs. I am able to drive two 4k at 60hz monitors, an external HDD, mouse and keyboard, and charge the device all from a single cable. For those whose primarily use a laptop at a desk setup like me, and occasionally like to take it off to go work on the couch or bed or something, this makes it super easy just having the one cable. #Upgradeability There are 8gbs of ram soldered onto the board, and an additional slot, which I throw a 16gb stick in for 24gb. There is an additional m.2 slot which I put another 512gb ssd in. Speaking of which, the SSD is crazy fast. While looking up benchmarks for other laptops, this one easily beat them all. I don't remember exact numbers but it's there. #Display 1080p, 144hz. Good color reproduction, and clear sharp images. Does not look washed out or anything. Not the brightest for working in sunlight though, but it's usable. The screen cannot tilt back 180 degrees, more like 140 ish? I use a laptop stand so I cant have it as vertically tilted as I like, but for 99% of people this is a non issue. The hinges feel solid and don't seem like they will crap out or break off like other. #Keyboard & Trackpad The backlit keyboard (one color, changeable brightness with keyboard keys or using software, also has different modes like breathing) is solid. Key travel is not shallow and has a good click. I do not notice a difference in quality with my Mx master key keyboard. The trackpad is average. Not glass, but precise and not an annoying texture. Not much to say on it. It gets the job done. #Design and build It is marketed as a 'tough' laptop and while it doesn't feel much different from a normal laptop (and isn't metal, it's some sort of hard plastic polymer), I have had 0 damage in the year i've owned it. The Tuf Dash f15 is solid, yet lightweight and not annoying to lug around. It is thin and not too heavy, and has similar dimensions and weight of most high powered ultrabooks. It has an attractive design that reminds me of a razer or macbook, I wish it didn't have the 'TUF' on the lid though it is very subtle coloring thankfully #Bugs Glitches & Software This is the first laptop i've had where I have not encountered really any bugs or glitches. I have had BSOD but I am almost postive these are from the Dell TB16 thunderbolt dock i'm using. Even these have only happened 2 times in 3 months. The laptop is ran off of Asus Armory Crate service, which has features such as profile switching, game optimziation, system tweaking and more. It can be accessed via a dedicated key. It is not super lightweight of a program, but not overly consuming either. You can close the program in task manager and the laptop will not have any issues, just some features are closed off. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2022 by Skylar Stickley

  • Quality
Amazing quality
Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2025 by Aidan Mackerell

  • buena pc
Style: 15.6” FHD | RTX4060 | Ryzen 5
super buena compuradora
Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2025 by Edwin Viscaino

  • Overall, really good value for money if you catch it on sale.
Style: 15.6” FHD | RTX4070 | Ryzen 9
So, my previous personal laptop was definitely outdated (circa 2015 Dell) and in need of replacement, even though it's not my primary PC and is more of a backup/something I can take on vacation with me. This time around I wanted something I could game on and/or act as a viable backup should something befall my desktop gaming rig. However, because this wouldn't be a daily driver or anything, I didn't feel the need to go all out, a moderate budget of $1000-$1500 was where I wanted to be. I wanted something with a relatively modern CPU, a decent discrete GPU, upgradable RAM, and upgradable storage. There were a few laptops that were in the running. But in the end the Asus TUF A15 won the day. Mainly on the strength of it checking most of the boxes and being on sale for $1200 USD when I bought it. At $1600+ this laptop isn't a great deal IMHO. It's downsides are hard to overlook at that price point. But at under $1300 things became a bit more palatable. The Good - The Ryzen 9 7940HS is fine laptop CPU. 8 cores/16 threads. It's usually comes in above the i7-13700H and below the i9-13900H in most benchmarks, but offers better battery life and considerably stronger iGPU. The Radeon 780M is powerful enough to run some older or less demanding games at 1080p decently. So you don't always have to use the discrete GPU when gaming. Which is a nice option to have. With that said, it does lose out in pure CPU grunt to the Intel HX's those are basically detuned desktop CPUs. But in terms of performance vs. efficiency , the 7940HS is hard to beat. It's similar in performance to a desktop Ryzen 5 7600X or desktop i5-12400 for context. - The RTX 4070 discrete GPU. This GPU is really more than you need for 1080p gaming, particularly with DLSS and Frame Gen. At 1080p In Cyberpunk with DLSS Quality and Frame Gen, and with Pyscho ray-tracing (but not path tracing) enabled and with most of the other settings at "high" Things are motoring along at 90-110 FPS on average, Same thing with Starfield (no ray tracing in that though). Gaming performance is more that satisfactory at 1080p, If you were running a 1440p display it would still probably be fine. The RTX 4070 mobile is somewhere between an RTX 3060 ti desktop and RTX 4060 desktop GPU in terms of performance, but it does seem to handle ray tracing with more grace and dignity than the Ampere cards and it has frame gen to fall back on as well. The only thing that gives me pause is the meager 8GB frame buffer. 8GB of VRAM is quickly becoming the baseline for newer games. A few years down the road, 8GB of VRAM might not cut anymore. - Upgradability. Laptops aren't known for vast amounts of customization. The Asus TUF A15 is about as good as you can reasonably expect. It has an open M.2 slot for another SSD, it's wifi card is easy to upgrade (more on that in a minute), and it has two slots for RAM, which is becoming rare in an era where soldering down the RAM is common. Access is easy enough, there are about a dozen screws keeping the bottom cover on, one of which is captive and two of which are different lengths, so if you're going to do some upgrades, keep track of which screws go where, if needed Asus has the whitepapers for this laptop on their website and it has breakdown of which screws go where. - Big battery. The battery is a very generous 90Wh. It's about as high a capacity as you can get in a 15.6 inch laptop. The battery life is very good by gaming laptop standards. As long as you're not using the discrete GPU, you can reasonably expect 7 hours on the low side to 9 hours on the high side of typical use. For gaming, as you might expect, battery life drops to around 3 to 4 hours depending on how hard you're pushing the discrete GPU. When running on battery the screen refresh rate drops to 60Hz by default, presumably to help with battery life. - The ports are generous. Being an AMD powered machine, Thunderbolt was going to be off the table. But good news! You get USB 4 on the A15, which can do most of the things that Thunderbolt can do. You get two USB A ports and two USB C ports (at least one of which is the USB 4), You also get an HDMI 2.1 port. It does support G-Sync over HDMI assuming the display you hook it up to is also G-Sync compliant. - Full keyboard. The A15's keyboard has a numberpad, not all laptops do. Now onto, the "meh" features of the TUF A15. These are the aspects of the laptop that aren't really good or terrible, but are areas where things could be better, but they're not that bad. - Build quality is fine for $1200, not really what you'd expect at the $1600+ price point though. - The RGB on the keyboard is a bit much at it's default setting - There's the usual amount of pre-installed shovel-ware. You probably won't have to resort to a clean Windows install, removing the various/dubious pre-installed dreck only took a few minutes, it wasn't bad as far these things go. - The trackpad sometimes acts up randomly where it will assume you're trying to select everything on the desktop as you move the mouse pointer. I updated the software/drivers for it, but it made no difference. What did work was taking a microfiber cloth, *slightly* dampening it then cleaning the trackpad (computer is off when you're doing this), then turn it back on and it works fine again. - The OEM SSD is a 1TB WD SN560 which I don't think was ever sold at retail. It is a Gen 4 NVMe drive, but it's not exactly one of the faster ones. I ran CrystalDisk and got ~5000 MB/s read and ~3300 MB/s write. Good enough, but likely an area where costs were cut. Real world performance is fine, the laptop boot up quite quickly. - You do get two 8GB SODIMMS standard for a total of 16GB of dual channel RAM. Unfortunately it's only DDR5-4800 which actually slower than what the motherboard/CPU can support. While it's nice to have dual channel RAM standard, the slower speed of the OEM RAM is a bit of a let down. This is probably another cost-saving measure. Now we're at the "things that should be better" part, these are omissions or features that should've been better from the start; - The screen. The screen on the TUF A15 is mediocre at best. At a $1200 price point, it's underwhelming, but acceptable. At a $1600+ price point, it's basically an insult. It's a 1080p screen which isn't exactly cutting edge stuff. It's got an entry level IPS panel, and it's not very bright. You're getting 250-300 nits here. It's fine for indoor use with the brightness turned up, outdoors on a sunny day, it's barely useable. Typically , if you're spending over $1500 on a laptop, it's going to have a 500+ nit screen that's much brighter than this. The color reproduction is again, very "mid". Basically, you're getting a display that would be at home on a $500-$800 laptop. At the $1200-ish price point, you can overlook it since you're getting a great CPU and GPU, but at $1600, you can get similar CPU/GPU combos with a much brighter, higher resolution screen. It's a bit of let down. But most reviews of this laptop do mention it. - The stock Wifi card. Again because you're using an AMD CPU/chipset, you're not getting an Intel wireless NIC. The stock MediaTek wifi card was inconsistent (at best) for me. I did some research on the issue and after various updates decided that an upgrade was needed. I ended up buying an Intel AX210 Wifi card and swapped out stock mediatek card. It was an easy job, the wifi antenna leads being a bit fiddly. Now the wifi performance is better and it's not dropping the wifi connection every 10 minutes anymore. I recommend this upgrade for anyone with this laptop. Here I'll list the upgrades I've done to my Asus TUF A15 - Changed the wifi card to an Intel AX210 - Upgraded the RAM from 2x 8GB DDR5 4800 to 2x 16GB DDR5 5600 (Crucial CT16G56C46S5) - Added a 2TB Crucial T500 in the extra M.2 slot. Overall with the upgrades, other than the lackluster screen there's not that much to complain about. I snagged the A15 for right at $1200 with the upgrades, I ended up under $1500. And to get something with comparable specs (but probably a better screen) I would be up around the $1600-$1800 range. So the value for money if you can pick it up for $1100-$1200 is very good., the specs are good, and at that price point the foibles can be overlooked/accepted. At $1500 and beyond, I don't think the value is there vs. other more premium laptops. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 1, 2025 by Forrest Hodge

  • Buen producto!!
Style: 15.6” FHD | RTX4070 | Ryzen 9
Fue un regalo para mi hermano, esto es una potente laptop,me encanto
Reviewed in the United States on May 3, 2025 by Patricia

  • No Issues
No issue going strong still
Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2025 by Honey

  • UPDATE: Garbage.../strikethru=on/Great Features/strikethru=off/, Poor Quality Control
Style: 15.6” FHD | RTX3050 Ti| i7
EDIT 09/25/2024 Well, today the NVME drive failed. Nine months after purchase. I've never had an NVME drive die on me. Fortunately, I had a spare from another computer but now I'm buying a fresh copy of Windows. Do not buy this laptop. _________________ As I write this, I'm am now one day out of the return window. There is a lot of information in other reviews about this laptop so I'll only focus on our experience. Pros: Fast shipping. Solid build - this laptop is something of a tank. Screen resolution and graphics ability are excellent. Overall operational speed is excellent. Keyboard quality is solid (I know, that's very subjective) Cons: Build quality is poor or maybe careless. Out of the box, the 3.5mm headphone jack did not work. Minor but annoying feature. My son ended up using the Thunderbolt port anyway so this was something of a minor issue. 8GB of RAM. Barely adequate for the task. ASUS probably skimped here to keep the costs down by $20 or so. The SSD drive is by TimeTec and it has failed ... just outside of the return window. Basically, the drive lasted 31 days or so. Obviously, ASUS skimped here as well as this is a very average drive. Compare the read/write speeds with a WD or other brand. Trying to install a fresh OS on a new drive has been difficult in the extreme. Overall, it's an average machine built to a price point. Be aware that you might end up swapping out parts or adding RAM eventually. We did and our laptop is only 31 days old +/-. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 29, 2024 by PKS

  • Computer
Awesome
Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2025 by gilbert

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