Prime Day gaming laptop deals can look impressive until you slow down and read the actual spec sheet. For gaming laptops, the discount only gets interesting after the GPU, display, memory, and storage pass inspection. These two MSI and ASUS deals stand out because their strengths are easy to understand before checkout.
MSI Katana 15 HX

- Excellent entry-level pricing
- Great 1080p gaming performance
- Comfortable customizable RGB keyboard
- Generous, versatile port selection
- Easy, user-upgradable internal parts
- Capable everyday productivity speeds
- Dim, washed-out display
- Heavy, thick plastic chassis
- Loud internal cooling fans
- Middling overall battery life
- Small base storage capacity
- Grainy, low-res webcam
The MSI Katana 15 HX is where I’d start if gaming performance is the priority. It’s down to $1,139.99 from a typical price of $1,349, which works out to 15% off.
The hardware makes the strongest argument here. You get an Intel Core i7-14650HX, Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060, 16GB of DDR5 RAM, a 1TB NVMe SSD, Wi-Fi 6E, and Windows 11. The display helps too, with a 15.6-inch QHD panel and 165Hz refresh rate. That pairing gives the Katana 15 HX a stronger gaming case than a lot of 1080p machines floating around the same price.
The rating pool is still small, but the early signal is encouraging: Amazon lists a 4.2-star average from 16 ratings. I wouldn’t buy it on user reviews alone, but the hardware does a lot of convincing on its own. The RTX 5060 and QHD 165Hz screen make the Katana 15 HX the cleaner performance pick here.
ASUS ROG Strix G18

- Desktop-class gaming performance
- Massive, immersive display area
- Surprisingly long battery life
- Excellent, quiet thermal management
- Generous, versatile port selection
- Easy tool-less internal upgrades
- Heavy, bulky to carry
- Chassis feels plasticky, smudges
- Ergonomics can feel awkward
- Underwhelming built-in webcam quality
- Requires bulky power brick
The ASUS ROG Strix G18 is the roomier alternative. At $1,239.99, down from $1,699.99, it costs about $100 more than the MSI, but the listed discount is steeper at 27% off.
The obvious appeal is the 18-inch ROG FHD+ 16:10 display with a 144Hz refresh rate. That gives you a more desktop-like setup for gaming, multitasking, or simply having more screen in front of you without plugging into an external monitor right away. You also get an AMD Ryzen 9 8940HX, 16GB of DDR5-5200 RAM, a 1TB SSD, Wi-Fi 6E, and Windows 11 Home.
The RTX 5050 is the reason I wouldn’t call this the stronger gaming buy. ASUS has a slightly bigger rating pool, but its 4.0-star average from 42 ratings still isn’t a landslide endorsement. I’d put MSI ahead for performance per dollar, while the ASUS makes more sense as a desk-first gaming laptop with more breathing room.