Review Laptops ASUS

ASUS V16 V3607VM Gaming Laptop - Review and opinions

ASUS V16 V3607VM Gaming
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7.0 Overall

Score

Mobility and battery 5.5/10
Display and format 7.6/10
Daily usability 6.1/10
Performance and configuration 7.2/10
Ports and connectivity 5.8/10
Customer reviews 6.7/10

Screen size

16 in Screen size
Top 3 for screen size

Storage

1024 GB Storage
Top 3 for storage 100% above average

Display and format

7.6/10 Score
Top 3 for display

User rating

6.7/10 Rating
+10 ratings

Is it worth it?

If you want a Windows gaming laptop that keeps the price-to-spec balance front and centre, the ASUS V16 V3607VM Gaming lands in a useful middle lane: Intel Core 7 240H, RTX 5060 graphics, 16 GB of DDR5 and a 1 TB SSD give it proper headroom for games and everyday multitasking. The trade-off is that this is still a budget-leaning gaming machine, so battery life, display comfort and overall refinement matter more than the headline spec list.

It suits buyers who want a light-ish 16-inch gaming laptop for home use, desk use and occasional carry, and who can live with a charger being part of the routine. If you need a machine that feels premium, stays quiet under load and doubles as a creator-first display tool, this is a weaker route; if you want strong gaming hardware without moving into a much pricier tier, it makes far more sense.

Screen size 16 Inches
Resolution 1920 x 1200 pixels
Processor Intel Core 7 Processor 240H 2.5 GHz, up to 5.2 GHz, 10 cores, 16 Threads
RAM 16 GB DDR5
Storage 1 TB M.2 NVMe PCIe 4.0 SSD

Gaming hardware with real headroom

The combination of Intel Core 7 240H, RTX 5060 graphics and 16 GB DDR5 puts this squarely in the performance class that matters for modern games and heavier multitasking.

That matters because the machine is not trying to win on basic office speed alone. It is built for buyers who want a gaming route first, then everyday Windows use second, with enough storage to avoid immediate pressure. The trade-off is that the 16 GB memory ceiling is still a sensible starting point rather than a luxury finish, so heavy multitasking and future growth matter more here than on a fully specced-up machine.

Screen size and resolution with a practical desktop feel

The 16-inch 1920 x 1200 panel gives more vertical room than a standard 1080p laptop, which helps in games, documents and browsing.

That extra line of space is useful when you are living in windows, inventories and web tabs. It is also a reminder that this is a utility display rather than a premium creator panel, so buyers who care about deep contrast or colour-critical work are better served elsewhere.

Built for plugged-in use

The box includes a UK charger and plug, and the visible buyer experience points to a 150 W power brick and battery life that is only acceptable rather than standout.

That changes how you plan your day. It is a sensible desk-and-sofa gaming laptop, but not a machine that rewards long stretches away from the wall. If you want a portable setup that still keeps gaming hardware honest, this is fine; if you want a genuinely untethered laptop, the charger burden is part of the deal.

Use evaluation

On a desk with a game, a browser and Discord open, the Core 7 240H and RTX 5060 give this laptop the kind of headroom that keeps it in the proper gaming lane rather than the casual-use lane. The 16 GB memory and 1 TB SSD make it feel ready for modern installs and everyday juggling, but the 16-inch 1920 x 1200 panel means the screen is doing more practical work than luxury work. That resolution on this size gives a sensible amount of space for menus and multitasking, yet it is still a mainstream WUXGA panel, not a creator display built to flatter colour work.

The real daily question is how it behaves once the novelty wears off. The confirmed backlit keyboard and the visible praise for heat management line up with a laptop that is easier to live with than many thinner gaming models, especially if you are typing at night or keeping it on a desk for long sessions. At the same time, the 150 W charger comment and the mixed feedback on noise and stability set the tone clearly: this is a machine that makes its best case when plugged in, not one that invites carefree all-day roaming.

For travel, lectures or moving between rooms, the lighter construction and 16-inch format make it more believable than a bulky desktop replacement, but the battery story remains the limiting factor. The practical fit is simple enough: use it as a portable gaming and general-use laptop with a charger nearby, and it looks like good value; expect silent, unplugged, all-day comfort and the compromises become harder to ignore.

Pros

  • Strong gaming hardware for the money.
  • 1 TB SSD and 16 GB DDR5 give a comfortable starting point.
  • Backlit keyboard and 16-inch format suit desk use.
  • Cooling comments are generally positive for a gaming laptop.

Cons

  • Battery life is not the main attraction.
  • Noise rises under gaming load for some buyers.
  • The display is not a standout for creative work.
  • Software or update friction appears in a minority of experiences.

Community

User reviews

The pattern is fairly clear: people who value gaming performance, cooling and price-to-spec balance tend to be satisfied, while the main disappointments come from noise, battery life, display quality and occasional software or stability friction. The useful lesson is that this model makes most sense when you buy it as a plugged-in gaming laptop first, not as a polished all-rounder.

Comparison

Attribute ASUS V16 V3607VM Gaming Current Acer Nitro V15 ANV15-52 HP Victus 15.6" Gaming
Price £999.99 £889.97 £849.00
Screen size 16 Inches 15.6 inches 15.6 Inches
Resolution 1920 x 1200 pixels 1920 x 1080 pixels 1920 x 1080 pixels
Processor Intel Core 7 Processor 240H 2.5 GHz, up to 5.2 GHz, 10 cores, 16 Threads Intel Core i7-13620H AMD Ryzen 7 7445H
RAM 16 GB DDR5 16 GB 16 GB
Storage 1 TB M.2 NVMe PCIe 4.0 SSD 512 GB SSD 512 GB
Editorial score 7.0/10 8.0/10 8.0/10

Against an Acer Nitro V15 ANV15-52, this ASUS leans harder into the newer RTX 5060 route and the larger 16-inch 1920 x 1200 screen, so it makes more sense if gaming performance and screen space matter more than keeping to a smaller 15.6-inch format. The Nitro route is the simpler pick if you want a more familiar mid-range gaming shape, while this ASUS is the stronger shout when you want the newer GPU tier and a bit more workspace on the panel.

Compared with the HP Victus 15.6" Gaming, the ASUS again looks like the more performance-led choice, especially for buyers who want the dedicated GPU route and a larger display. The Victus route remains the neater fit if you prefer a 15.6-inch machine that sits a little more conventionally on the desk, but the ASUS is the one to choose when the buying question is how much gaming hardware you can get before the price climbs too far.

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Is the ASUS V16 V3607VM Gaming laptop worth it?

If you want a reasonably priced gaming laptop with a dedicated RTX 5060, a 16-inch 1920 x 1200 screen and enough storage to feel properly equipped from day one, this ASUS V16 V3607VM Gaming makes a solid case. The current offer is worth checking if you are shopping in the sub-a price band around 1000 GBP gaming lane and want a machine that prioritises performance over polish.

Skip it if you need quiet operation, standout display quality or dependable all-day battery life, because those are the areas where the compromises are most visible. For buyers who are happy to keep it near a charger and use it as a gaming-first Windows laptop, the trade-off is sensible; for everyone else, a more balanced mainstream or creator-leaning alternative is the safer buy.

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FAQ

Is this better for gaming or office work?

Gaming first, office work second. The RTX 5060, 16 GB DDR5 and 1 TB SSD make it a proper performance laptop, while the 16-inch WUXGA screen and backlit keyboard keep everyday use comfortable enough.

Can it be relied on for long unplugged sessions?

Not really. The battery and charger behaviour place it in the plugged-in gaming category, so it suits short moves and desk use much better than long days away from mains power.

Alexandre Lefèvre

About the author

Alexandre Lefèvre

Tech enthusiast focused on testing and reviewing the latest devices. I share honest insights to help you choose the right products with confidence.