MSI release their limited edition World of Tanks GP62M notebook

MSI release their limited edition World of Tanks GP62M notebook

MSI release their limited edition World of Tanks GP62M notebook

 
If there is one thing that MSI are good it is the creation of themed notebooks, recently releasing their Ghost Recon themed Camo Squad GE62 notebook and now their new World of Tanks Edition GP62M notebook. 
 
The GP62M is designed to offer users with respectable levels of gaming performance while also coming with low-TDP hardware to offer long battery lives, with Intel i7 CPUs and Nvidia GTX 1050 or 1050 Ti GPUs. 
 
This new GP62M notebook also comes with a SteelSeries RGB notebook keyboard, up to 32GB of DDR4 DRAM and an NVMe SSD at stock. The GP62M World of Tanks Edition is easily capable of playing World of Tanks, with specifications that are far in excess of the game’s PC system requirements. 
 

  
MSI release their limited edition World of Tanks GP62M notebook

 

The MSI GP62M Gaming World of Tanks Edition Notebook comes with the following game content bundle, which should give any new or existing player a nice boost in experience. 

 

 

          60 Days premium account

          An IS2 Tank

          2000 Gold

          2 hours of 200% crew experience x5

          2 hours of +50% credits x5

          2 hours of 300% free experience x10

 

  
MSI release their limited edition World of Tanks GP62M notebook

 

You can join the discussion on MSI’s new World of Tanks Edition GP62M Gaming notebook on the OC3D Forums

 

  

Uh-oh! It looks like you're using an ad blocker.

OC3D relies on ads to provide free content and sustain our operations. By white listing us on your ad blocker, you help support us and ensure we can continue offering valuable content without any cost to you. We only run our own hand picked ads from Industry brands like MSI, BeQuiet, Sapphire and PC-Specialist - meaning they are all relevent to the content you are reading.

We truly appreciate your understanding and support. Thank you for considering whitelisting OC3D