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1. This laptop, like the supermajority of those available, doesn't have a separate GPU. 2. When a laptop does list a separate GPU, IN THE VAST MAJORITY OF CASES, there is no separate "card," as would be found in a desktop. There is a separate CHIP, and this is soldered in, meaning no practical upgrade (short of replacing the entire motherboard). This is even true for laptops aimed at the gaming market. Only some notebooks have a true separate card, like the Framework. Of the hundreds of distinct laptop models released each year, probably less than a half dozen have the capacity for a real, physical, separate video card. Also, all those with this flexibility are priced much higher than their equivalent without it. 3. Your options: (a) buy a desktop with the features you want. You always get more bang for your buck with desktops. (b) Buy a laptop with an AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT or NVIDIA RTX 3070, or equivalent. (c) Buy a laptop with a Thunderbolt port (preferably Gen 4), then buy a separate, external GPU later (btw, these are also expensive).
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