Dream Computers Pty Ltd

Professional IT Services & Information Management

Dream Computers Pty Ltd

Professional IT Services & Information Management

Buying a Refurbished HP Victus 16 Second-Hand in Australia

The HP Victus 16 was built to be the sensible gaming laptop: a big 16.1-inch screen, a serious cooling system, and enough graphics grunt for real play without the flashing-lights premium. Buy one second-hand or refurbished in Australia and you keep all of that, while letting the first owner absorb the steep early depreciation that hits every new laptop the moment it leaves the shop.

The numbers that change the conversation

20-60%
typical saving vs a new Victus 16
~80%
of a laptop’s lifetime CO2 is from making it
588,000t
of e-waste Australia makes every year
~10%/yr
growth in the second-hand electronics market

Top refurbished hp victus 16 gaming laptops on eBay right now

Here is a live snapshot of Victus 16 listings, sorted so you can compare configurations and asking prices at a glance.

HP Victus 15.6" FHD 144Hz (Core i7-13620H, 16GB/1TB SSD, RT…
Good - Refurbished
HP Victus 15.6" FHD 144Hz (Core i7-13620H, 16GB/1TB SSD, RTX 5060) Ga…
$1,595 AUD
View on eBay →
HP Victus 15.6 144Hz FHD 3.3 GHz Ryzen 5 7535HS 16GB 512GB …
Excellent - Refurbished
HP Victus 15.6 144Hz FHD 3.3 GHz Ryzen 5 7535HS 16GB 512GB SSD AMD RX…
$957 AUD
View on eBay →
HP Victus 16.1 FHD 144Hz 3.8GHz Ryzen 7 8845HS 16GB 512GB S…
Very Good - Refurbished
HP Victus 16.1 FHD 144Hz 3.8GHz Ryzen 7 8845HS 16GB 512GB SSD RTX 407…
$1,436 AUD
View on eBay →
HP Victus Gaming 15.6 144Hz FHD 3.2 GHz Ryzen 7 7445HS 16GB…
Good - Refurbished
HP Victus Gaming 15.6 144Hz FHD 3.2 GHz Ryzen 7 7445HS 16GB 512GB SSD…
$1,276 AUD
View on eBay →
HP Victus Gaming 15 144Hz FHD 2.6 GHz i5-13500H 16GB 1TB SS…
Very Good - Refurbished
HP Victus Gaming 15 144Hz FHD 2.6 GHz i5-13500H 16GB 1TB SSD RTX 4050…
$1,212 AUD
View on eBay →
HP Victus 16-r0073cl 16.1" FHD i7-13700HX 32GB 1TB SSD RTX …
Very Good - Refurbished
HP Victus 16-r0073cl 16.1" FHD i7-13700HX 32GB 1TB SSD RTX 4060 W11H …
$1,595 AUD
View on eBay →

Listings update automatically and open in a new tab.

Why second-hand is not “second best”

A gaming laptop earns its keep on two parts that barely age: the GPU and the screen. The Victus 16’s NVIDIA RTX or GTX graphics chip renders frames exactly the same in year three as it did on day one, and its 144Hz-class 16.1-inch panel does not get slower or dimmer just because someone else owned it first. What you are really paying down on a used unit is cosmetic wear and a depleted warranty, not lost performance.

The Victus 16 also happens to be one of the easier gaming laptops to live with second-hand. It uses standard, accessible RAM slots and an M.2 SSD bay, so a refurbisher (or you) can drop in more memory or a bigger, fresher drive cheaply. That single-fan-or-dual-fan cooling tray and the removable bottom panel mean a good seller can clean out the dust and repaste the chip, returning thermals close to new. A laptop you can service is a laptop worth buying used.

The Victus 16’s GPU and 144Hz panel do not know they are second-hand. Only the price tag does.

The savings are real

New 16-inch gaming laptops with discrete NVIDIA graphics sit at a price point that makes most Australians wince. The Victus 16 was HP’s answer to that, and the second-hand market pushes it further still. Because the line sold in volume to students and first-time gamers, supply is healthy, and healthy supply keeps used prices honest. A 20% to 60% saving against the new equivalent is the realistic band, and the bigger discounts usually appear on lightly-cosmetically-marked units or earlier configurations that perform almost identically to the current ones. That is money you can redirect into a larger SSD, an external monitor, or simply keep.

New vs used, side by side

  Brand new Used / refurbished
Price Full RRP 20-60% less
Gaming performance Identical GPU class Identical GPU class
Battery health 100% Worth checking (see below)
Warranty Full HP warranty Seller/refurb warranty + ACL
Upgradeable RAM/SSD Yes Yes (often already done)
Environmental cost ~80% CO2 spent making it That cost already paid

The five-minute checklist before you pay

  • Confirm the exact GPU. Victus 16 shipped with a wide spread of graphics, from an RTX 4060 down to older GTX or RTX entry chips. Ask the seller for the precise model in Device Manager or dxdiag, not just “RTX”.
  • Match the CPU brand. Both Intel and AMD versions exist. Neither is “wrong”, but it changes what you are comparing on, so pin it down before judging the price.
  • Check the panel. The 16.1-inch screen came in 60Hz and faster 144Hz-class versions. For gaming you want the high-refresh panel; ask the seller to confirm the refresh rate.
  • Ask about battery wear. Request a battery health figure (HP’s own tools or a free utility report it as a percentage of design capacity). Some screen-on wear is normal; very low capacity is a bargaining point.
  • Look at the hinges and bottom vents. The Victus is plastic and lives a hot life; flex around the hinges or heavily dust-clogged vents tell you how hard it was run.
  • Verify RAM and storage. Confirm how much memory and what size SSD are actually fitted, since these are commonly swapped and easy to misrepresent.

You have more protection than you think

If you buy a refurbished Victus 16 from a business (a refurbisher, a retailer, or a commercial eBay seller), the Australian Consumer Law applies on top of anything they offer. Goods must be of acceptable quality, fit for purpose, and match their description. A used laptop sold as “fully working, RTX 4060, 144Hz” that turns up with a dead fan or the wrong GPU is not yours to absorb, regardless of any “sold as seen” line in the listing. Consumer guarantees cannot be signed away. Private one-off sales carry fewer of these protections, which is one reason a business-backed refurbished unit is usually the safer buy.

Ready to find yours?

Browse current refurbished and second-hand Victus 16 options from trusted sellers and compare configurations against the checklist above.

Red flags to walk away from

  • Vague graphics claims. “NVIDIA gaming GPU” with no model number, or photos that hide the spec sticker, usually means the cheaper chip.
  • No battery information and refusal to provide it. A seller who will not run a one-line health report has something to hide.
  • Loud fan noise or thermal shutdowns mentioned in passing. On a Victus this points to clogged vents or dried paste; fine if you plan to service it, not fine at full price.
  • Cracked hinge housings or a lifting bottom panel. Cosmetic on most laptops, but on the Victus the hinge area is a known stress point worth inspecting closely.
  • A price that matches new. If the discount is tiny, the warranty and battery you are giving up are not worth it. Walk.

Frequently asked questions

Can a refurbished Victus 16 still run current games? Yes. With an RTX-class GPU and the 144Hz panel it handles modern titles well at 1080p, often with frame-generation features on the RTX models. Match your expectations to the exact GPU it carries.

Is the battery a problem on used units? Gaming laptops are usually run on mains, so cells are often in better shape than you would fear. Always ask for a health percentage, and remember the Victus’s internal battery is replaceable later if needed.

Should I get the Intel or AMD version? Both game well; the GPU matters more than the CPU brand for frame rates. Choose on price and the specific configuration in front of you rather than the badge.

Can I upgrade it after buying? Yes, and easily. The Victus 16 has accessible RAM slots and an M.2 SSD bay, so adding memory or a larger drive is a cheap, common upgrade on a used unit.

The bottom line

The Victus 16 was always the pragmatic gaming laptop, and second-hand is the most pragmatic way to buy it. The parts that make it good, the discrete GPU and the high-refresh 16.1-inch screen, do not degrade with one careful owner, while the price drops 20% to 60% and you sidestep the enormous manufacturing footprint baked into every new machine. Confirm the GPU, the refresh rate and the battery, buy from a business so the Australian Consumer Law has your back, and you land a genuinely capable gaming laptop for a fraction of the new outlay.


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Buying a Refurbished HP Victus 16 Second-Hand in Australia
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