![]() The system was playable in Metro: Last Light Redux with medium settings at 1080p, but it struggled to keep up under the duress of higher resolutions and more taxing detail settings. Gaming Benchmark - Metro: Last Light Redux There, the XPS 15's faster CPU facilitates better performance. When the settings are dialed back, the situation reverses itself as the hardware isn't pushed as hard, generating less heat. After all, the Inspiron's fans were much louder during testing, which suggests the fans worked harder to cool the system to avoid thermal issues. ![]() I suspect that this is because of the better cooling system on the Inspiron 15 7559, which has much larger vents. It falls slightly behind Dell's Inspiwhen all of the settings are maxed out, but pulls ahead as you start dialing back graphics quality. The XPS 15 struggles to play Bioshock Infinite at 4K, but the game runs fine at 1080p. The only option between 1080p and 4K was 2048x1152. I tried to do the same for 2K, but Bioshock didn't support the option I needed. In order to test at 4K, I loaded up the game, manually switched to 3840x2160, exited the game and then ran the test with the user-set resolution. When I attempted to run the test at 2K, it crashed. The built-in benchmark utility doesn't allow you to set a resolution above 2560x1440. I was only able to test Bioshock Infinite at 1080p and 3840x2160.
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