Game on with Evoo's refurbished 15.6-inch laptop with an RTX 2060 graphics card

Evoo Gaming Laptop
Evoo Gaming Laptop (Image credit: Walmart)

Graphics cards really mess up the prices for desktops and laptops these days. If you're hungry for a new laptop and don't want to pay crazy prices, check out Walmart's Evoo 15.6-inch gaming laptop going for $638.40 refurbished. It's loaded with features including a Nvidia GeForce RTX 2060 graphics card. This price is basically less than the graphics card alone. Just look at similar versions of this laptop that are brand new. Some of them go for as much as $1,300 with almost the same specifications. It's a great deal if you don't mind dealing with a refurbished product.

Yes, this laptop is refurbished. That's okay, though. Walmart has a decent return policy within 30 days, and it's covered by a 90-day warranty. Give it a chance and see if it works out for you. If you're looking for a gaming laptop, you can't do a whole lot better for the price.

The laptop comes with an AMD Ryzen 7 4800H 8-core mobile processor, which we have already determined is good for gaming. The machine also has a 512GB solid state drive, 16GB RAM, and a Nvidia GeForce RTX 2060 6GB graphics card. The graphics card is impressive enough, but a good processor and 16GB RAM on top of that makes this quite a good bargain.

You'll be playing all your video games on a 15.6-inch display with 1920 x 1080 pixel resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate. Other features include Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi, and a built-in HD front-facing webcam. It has an HDMI port, a mini DisplayPort, two USB-A 3.1 ports, one USB-A 2.0 port, and a USB-C port. You can even add more storage with a microSD card reader.

John Levite
Deals Editor

J.D. Levite has been in the deals game since 2012. He has posted daily deals at Gizmodo, The Wirecutter, The Sweethome, and now covers deals for Android Central, iMore, and Windows Central. He was there for the first Prime Day and has braved the full force of Black Friday. If you cut him, he bleeds savings. But don't try it for real. That's a metaphor.