The abolition of Max-Q branding has made purchasing GeForce RTX 30 series laptops complicated. The RTX 3060 offers a higher TGP than the RTX 3080 in some instances, but many OEMs keep this a secret from people. Thankfully, ASUS has now followed XMG in including the TGPs and clock speeds of its RTX 30 series gaming laptops on its product pages.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/ASUS-updates-its-product-pages-with-TGPs-and-clock-speeds-for-its-NVIDIA-GeForce-RTX-30-series-laptops-ROG-Zephyrus-G14-has-a-60-W-RTX-3060.518334.0.html
Well, I just checked this for example and it doesn't have the wattage:https://store.asus.com/us/item/202101AM090000010
Pretty vague, for example is it a BASE MINIMUM of 80w with an extra 15w boost total 95w OR is it a 65w BASE with 15w boost total 80w? The boost, whatever marketing babel speak version, seems to be minimal if at all with some real world user experiences. 65w w 15w boost sounds very sketchy and not much more than a standard 2060 90w making it a total ripoff by nvidia and cronies.
I'm more interested in TDP in Asus laptops. After all, this directly affects the expected noise level. And already the number of "parrots" interests me last.
I'm sure Asus isn't the one to blame for this worldwide confusion