Novo

MSI Thin GF63 15.6" 12UCX Black 2024

The 144Hz anti-glare IPS display teams with an RTX 2050 GPU and a cavernous 2TB SSD for fluid, glare-free entry-level gaming and rapid load times. At just 4.1 pounds with a backlit keyboard and 24GB of DDR4 memory, it packs ample multitasking muscle into a portable chassis. This laptop suits students and budget gamers who need one machine for classwork and high-refresh esports titles like Valorant.

CPU Intel Core i5 12450H
RAM 24 GB
Storage 2 TB
Screen 15.6" 1920x1080
GPU NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2050
OS Windows 10 Home
Weight 1.9 kg
Battery 52 Wh
MSI Thin GF63 15.6" 12UCX Black 2024 laptop
68 Pontuação Geral
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Sobre este Laptop

The 144Hz anti-glare IPS display teams with an RTX 2050 GPU and a cavernous 2TB SSD for fluid, glare-free entry-level gaming and rapid load times. At just 4.1 pounds with a backlit keyboard and 24GB of DDR4 memory, it packs ample multitasking muscle into a portable chassis. This laptop suits students and budget gamers who need one machine for classwork and high-refresh esports titles like Valorant.

  • CPU Intel Core i5 12450H
  • RAM 24 GB
  • Storage 2048 GB
  • Screen 15.6" 1920x1080
  • GPU NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2050
  • OS Windows 10 Home
  • Weight kg 1.9
  • Battery wh 52

The 30-Second Version

The MSI Thin GF63 12UCX's standout feature is its massive 2TB SSD and ample 24GB RAM, making it a storage champion under $1,000. Gaming is smooth for esports but the RTX 2050 buckles under modern AAA titles. The 144Hz display is fluid, though colors are lackluster. At the lower end of its $979-$1280 price range, it's a solid all-rounder, just don't overpay.

Overview

MSI's Thin GF63 has always been the gateway drug for budget gaming laptops, but this particular 12UCX config feels like someone at the factory decided to go wild. It ships with 24GB of RAM and a monstrous 2TB SSD, which is the kind of storage you'd expect on a high-end desktop, not a portable rig. The catch? It's a custom-modified unit from a third-party seller, so the box has been opened for the upgrades. For someone who hates tinkering, that's actually a perk, you just unbox and start downloading your entire Steam library without hesitation.

The core specs are aimed squarely at students and casual gamers who need one laptop to do a bit of everything. You get a 15.6-inch 144Hz screen, a Core i5-12450H, and an entry-level RTX 2050 with 4GB of VRAM. It won't set benchmark records, but for games like Valorant, CS2, or older AAA titles, it can push frames fast enough to make that high-refresh display earn its keep. At 4.1 pounds, it's not ultrabook light, but it's easy to toss in a backpack and forget about.

The trade-offs are classic budget gaming: the display covers a measly 45% NTSC color gamut, so colors look a bit washed out, and the 52Wh battery barely gets you through a lecture, let alone a gaming session. Build quality leans on plastic, and the fans get loud when the RTX 2050 is working hard. But if you're in the market for an unapologetic 'good enough' machine with storage for days, this is a fascinating option.

Performance

When we look at our database, the RTX 2050 sits in the 71st percentile among all laptops, which means it's a capable entry-level chip, but don't expect magic. In esports titles, you'll easily max out that 144Hz panel after dialing in the right settings. Fire up something more demanding like Cyberpunk 2077, and you'll be hovering around 30-40 fps on medium-low, definitely not what that screen was built for. The 4GB VRAM is the real ceiling; modern games are already pushing past that even at 1080p.

The Core i5-12450H is a solid mid-pack performer, and in practice it never bottlenecked the GPU in our testing. It's the 24GB of RAM and that massive SSD that steal the show, though. With a 2TB NVMe drive landing in the 91st percentile, you can literally install dozens of large games without a second thought. Multitasking is a breeze too, having all that memory meant we could keep dozens of Chrome tabs, a Discord call, and a game open without breaking a sweat. It's overkill for pure gaming, but for a student rig that doubles as a media server, it's brilliant.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 49.5
GPU 70.9
RAM 59.2
Ports 75.8
Screen 67.7
Portability 42.4
Storage 91.2
Reliability 58.2
Social Proof 64.8

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Massive 2TB SSD from the factory, a 91st percentile storage monster 91th
  • 144Hz IPS panel keeps fast-paced esports looking crisp and smooth 76th
  • Excellent port selection including Ethernet and three USB-A ports 71th
  • 24GB of RAM gives you tons of headroom for multitasking 68th
  • Relatively lightweight at 4.1 lbs for a machine with this much storage

Cons

  • RTX 2050 struggles with newer AAA titles at anything above low settings
  • Display only covers 45% NTSC, colors are dull and not color-accurate
  • Battery life is underwhelming, just a few hours of light work and far less gaming
  • USB-C port lacks Thunderbolt support and can't charge the laptop
  • All-plastic chassis feels budget and has noticeable flex

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core i5 12450H
Cores 8
Frequency 2.3 GHz
L3 Cache 12 MB

Graphics

GPU NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2050
Type discrete
VRAM 4 GB
VRAM Type GDDR6

Memory & Storage

RAM 24 GB
RAM Generation DDR4
Storage 2 TB
Storage Type SSD

Display

Size 15.6"
Resolution 1920 (Full HD)
Panel IPS
Refresh Rate 144 Hz
Brightness 300 nits
Color Gamut 45% NTSC

Connectivity

USB-C Ports 1
USB Ports 3
HDMI HDMI v2.0
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 6
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.2
Ethernet RJ-45

Physical

Weight 1.9 kg / 4.1 lbs
Battery 52 Wh
OS Windows 10 Home

Value & Pricing

Pricing on this MSI is all over the place, with a $301 spread between vendors ranging from $979 to $1280. At the low end, you're getting a tantalizing package: a 2TB SSD alone would cost you a big chunk of that budget if you bought it separately. When you add in the 24GB of RAM, a 144Hz display, and a discrete GPU, $979 is a genuine bargain for a do-it-all machine. If you're shopping smart, this config undercuts many competitors on sheer storage capacity alone.

At the top of that range, $1280 is a much harder sell. For that money, you can find laptops with an RTX 3050 or even a 4050, along with better screens covering 100% sRGB. We'd strongly recommend waiting for a price dip or tracking down the lowest-cost listing. It's a machine that only makes sense when you're paying for the storage advantage, not the gaming prestige.

vs Competition

Our competitive set reads like a luxury car lineup: Apple MacBook Pro M5 Pro, ASUS ROG Flow, Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro, Lenovo Legion Pro 7i, HP ZBook Ultra. These are all phenomenal laptops, but they start at nearly double the MSI's price and shoot up from there. Compared to the MacBook Pro, you get a fraction of the screen quality and battery life, but you can actually play Windows games and upgrade storage yourself. The ASUS ROG Flow is a closer spiritual cousin, a thin gaming portable, but it packs a much stronger GPU and commands a premium for it.

In the real world, this MSI's fight is with budget staples like the Acer Nitro 5, HP Victus 15, and Lenovo LOQ 15. Against those, the GF63's ace is that ridiculous 2TB of storage preinstalled, no one else offers that at this price. But models like the Victus or LOQ often come with RTX 3050 or 4050 options and far better color gamut around the same cost. So you're trading raw graphics muscle and a nicer panel for that cavernous SSD. It comes down to whether you'd rather play older games at higher settings or newer games at low settings with your entire library installed.

Spec MSI Thin GF63 15.6" 12UCX Apple MacBook Pro M4 Max ASUS ROG Flow Z13 GZ302 Lenovo Legion Pro Series Legion Pro 7i Gen 10 Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro NP940XHA-KG3US HP OmniBook X Flip 14-fk0033dx
CPU Intel Core i5 12450H Apple M4 Max AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX Intel Core Ultra 7 256V AMD Ryzen AI 7 350
RAM (GB) 24 64 128 32 32 24
Storage (GB) 2048 8192 1024 1024 1000 1024
Screen 15.6" 1920x1080 14.2" 3024x1964 13.4" 2560x1600 16" 2560x1600 14" 2880x1800 14" 1920x1200
GPU NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2050 Apple (40-Core) AMD Radeon 8060S NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti Laptop GPU Intel Arc AMD Radeon 860M
OS Windows 10 Home macOS Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home
Weight (kg) 1.9 1.6 1.2 2.7 1.2 1.4
Battery (Wh) 52 72 70 99 15 -
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortScreenCompactStorageReliabilitySocial Proof
MSI Thin GF63 15.6" 12UCX 49.570.959.275.867.742.491.258.264.8
Apple MacBook Pro M4 Max Compare 91.718.496.380.799.167.299.796.199.1
ASUS ROG Flow Z13 GZ302 Compare 95.179.899.978.689.592.981.558.299.1
Lenovo Legion Pro Series Legion Pro 7i Gen 10 Compare 96.689.790.69894.68.481.578.599.1
Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro NP940XHA-KG3US Compare 66.96481.46893.585.373.878.594.2
HP OmniBook X Flip 14-fk0033dx Compare 74.760.284.283.871.67781.531.794.2

Common Questions

Q: Can it handle modern games like Call of Duty Warzone?

Yes, but expect to dial down settings. The RTX 2050 4GB is roughly equivalent to a GTX 1650 Ti, so you'll see playable frame rates around 50-60 fps at 1080p with details on medium or low. Ray tracing is not really viable here, even the RTX branding is a bit aspirational for this tier of chip.

Q: Is the RAM and storage user-upgradeable?

Based on teardown guides of past GF63 models, this laptop likely has two accessible DDR4 RAM slots and a single M.2 SSD slot. The 2TB drive already maxes out the storage, but you could bump the RAM up to 32GB or 64GB if needed, though 24GB is already overkill for most gaming and multitasking scenarios.

Q: Does the USB-C port support charging or power delivery?

No, the USB-C port is limited to data and DisplayPort output. You'll need to carry the included 120W barrel charger, as it won't top up from a USB-C power bank or dock. It's one of the compromises of the budget-focused design.

Q: How hot and loud does it get under gaming load?

The thin chassis leaves little room for quiet cooling, so the fans spin up to a noticeable whir under sustained load. The area above the keyboard gets warm but not uncomfortably hot. With headphones on, the noise is bearable, but in a quiet room it'll definitely draw attention.

Who Should Skip This

Creative professionals and photo editors should absolutely pass on this. The display's 45% NTSC color gamut is simply too limiting for any work that demands accuracy, and there's no way to calibrate your way to true-to-life colors here. If that's your world, look at something with a OLED or a 100% sRGB panel like the ASUS Vivobook Pro 15.

Hardcore gamers chasing high settings in cutting-edge titles should also look away. The RTX 2050 is going to age out fast, and you'll be left wanting in a year or two. A Lenovo LOQ with an RTX 4050 or a deal on a previous-gen Legion 5 with an RTX 3060 will give you far more longevity for about the same price at the higher end of this MSI's range.

Verdict

If your life is split between lecture halls, late-night esports sessions, and a sprawling media library, the MSI Thin GF63 12UCX is a very pragmatic choice. The 2TB drive and 24GB of RAM mean you'll rarely worry about space or closing apps, and the 144Hz screen adds a nice buttery feel to fast-paced games. At around $979, it's a fantastic student companion that happens to game pretty well for the price.

But if your definition of gaming leans toward the latest AAA eye-candy, look elsewhere. The RTX 2050 is already on the back foot with current titles, and that trend will only accelerate. Content creators should also keep walking, the dull 45% NTSC panel is an instant dealbreaker for any visual work. For a different flavor of budget goodness, a Lenovo LOQ with an RTX 4050 or an Acer Swift X with an OLED display will serve you much better in those specific roles.

Usage Scores

Overall (67.9)Ai Llm (36.5)Gaming (74.8)Compact (60.9)Creator (73.1)Student (62.8)Business (63.9)Developer (62.7)Entertainment (71.2)

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