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crwdns2934243:0crwdne2934243:0 Jacob Mehnert

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-To put it bluntly, no. To put it not as bluntly, the issue with upgrading most gaming laptops is that components like CPUs and GPUs are typically integrated directly into the motherboard. This makes upgrading these specific components difficult. Normally I would suggest using a eGPU, however it does not seem that the Aspire 3 has Thunderbolt support.
+To put it bluntly, no. To put it not as bluntly, the issue with upgrading most gaming laptops is that components like CPUs and GPUs are typically integrated directly into the motherboard. This makes upgrading these specific components difficult. Normally I would suggest using an eGPU, however, it does not seem that the Aspire 3 has Thunderbolt support.
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+I also saw some of your other questions. You can also speed up your machine by upgrading the RAM and an SSD.

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crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Jacob Mehnert

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-To put it bluntly, no. The issue with upgrading gaming laptops is that components like CPUs and GPUs are normally integrated directly into the motherboard. This makes upgrading these specific components difficult. Normally I would suggest using a eGPU, however it does not seem that the Aspire 3 has Thunderbolt support.
+To put it bluntly, no. To put it not as bluntly, the issue with upgrading most gaming laptops is that components like CPUs and GPUs are typically integrated directly into the motherboard. This makes upgrading these specific components difficult. Normally I would suggest using a eGPU, however it does not seem that the Aspire 3 has Thunderbolt support.

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crwdns2934241:0crwdne2934241:0 Jacob Mehnert

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

To put it bluntly, no. The issue with upgrading gaming laptops is that components like CPUs and GPUs are normally integrated directly into the motherboard. This makes upgrading these specific components difficult. Normally I would suggest using a eGPU, however it does not seem that the Aspire 3 has Thunderbolt support.

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