Acer’s ‘best ever’ Prime Day sales bring big price cuts for laptops and super-cheap Chromebooks – these are the ones I recommend checking out

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After a long period of early discounts, Amazon Prime Day is finally here, and it means there are a ton of Prime Day laptop deals to go around. Fortunately, Acer is here to deliver with some of the heaviest discounts I’ve ever seen for its gaming laptops and Chromebooks; many of these are great for productivity and creative tasks as well.

Just to highlight a few of my favorites here, the Acer Swift Predator Helios Neo 14 is available for £899.99 (previously £1,099.99) on Amazon, which uses Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 4060 laptop GPU.

With the advantage of DLSS 4 and Frame Generation, you’ll be able to enjoy a range of your favorite games – and this is thanks to Nvidia’s new DLSS Super Resolution transformer model (from the previous CNN version), providing sharper image quality even on its ‘performance’ mode.

It’s not only gaming laptops getting price cuts, though. The Acer Swift 14 AI rocks a phenomenal 2.8K OLED display for enhanced visual experiences, whether you’re gaming, creating content, or simply just watching movies. It’s the ideal laptop for creators and professionals, and it’s available for just £731.48 (previously £1,099.99).

There’s plenty to keep an eye on this Amazon Prime Day, and Acer’s laptops and Chromebooks are just the start!

Not in the UK? Scroll down to see the best Acer laptop and Chromebook deals in your region!

Today’s best Acer laptop and Chromebook deals in the UK

Since I’m a gamer, the easiest choice here is the Acer Predator Helios Neo 14. While it’s using an 8GB RTX 4060 laptop GPU (which isn’t exactly cutting-edge in 2025), it’s still more than capable of providing great gaming experiences when playing games at reasonable resolutions and graphics settings.

DLSS 4 is a great tool to take advantage of, and acts as a saviour for more demanding games, like Cyberpunk 2077. Frame Generation may be an option to make use of since it requires more VRAM usage; 8GB isn’t ideal for scenarios where Frame Generation is needed, but it’s easier to use in less demanding titles.

Besides performance concerns, it’s one of the cheapest gaming laptops I’ve seen in a long while, and if I were seeking a new portable system that lets me play games without spending a fortune, that would be my choice.

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