According to The Verge there is another configuration of this machine with double the RAM and a 4K 240Hz for the same price.
Why in the world would you want a 1080p display just to get an extra 120 FPS? Even if you can perceive that difference (which I kind of doubt) you’re not going to get rates that high with your settings up high anyway. In The Verge’s tests only the old CS:GO got above 150 (it got over 400!).
“ In conclusion, putting a 1080p screen on this system is like sticking an MLB player in a Little League game. Sure, he’s gonna look impressive, but what is the point? These are 4K chips, and I’m not just referring to the price of this unit.”
There are people who want extremely high framerates, and they are the people this product is for. They play games that are not CPU-bound below the framerates they want, and they adjust the graphics settings until they achieve those framerates. The fact that they are throwing expensive modern GPU hardware at graphics that may be relatively primitive on a per-frame basis doesn't matter; for them, it's the framerate that matters.
Beyond that, one imagines there may be some performance and power overhead, and many hardcore high-FPS players will probably prefer a display that natively matches their target resolution. It eliminates unnecessary variables that might affect performance.
Current GPU can't handle 4K120Hz on latest game with higher settings, and 4K on laptop for gaming isn't strongly needed. 1440p240Hz would be another sweet spot but 1080p360Hz is for who prefer the top refresh rate.
Professional CS:GO is played mostly at 1280x720 and 300-400FPS+
There is definitely a market need for this type of setup, whether you think it's a dumb idea or not.
You don't play on the highest settings in competitive shooters even when you are CPU bound and your machine outputs same amount of frames regardless of performance. Higher settings means more distractions for them.
Well no... they put a very fast (high refresh) gaming screen in a gaming laptop.
If you want QHD or 4K screens, they are out there. That's not... more than a Google away. So it's a really bad assumption to make.
Here, first google result for "Intel 4K laptop", it's $1500.
https://www.bestbuy.com/site/asus-zenbook-flip-15-q538ei-15-...
Your faulty logic was disproved.