@ Vibhu,
as a Macbook Pro user with AMD Graphics, a 2011 model, I advise you not to. Yes Apple does provide Bootcamp, but it isn’t all its cracked up to be. First, in Bootcamp Apple actually lies to Windows about the hardware you have. So, it will tell Windows you only have the AMD Graphics card, and not the internal Intel GPU, which will lower your battery life, making Windows appear to be more power hungry. You also can’t use AHCI mode for hard disks, which significantly lowers the speed of SSDs, not to mention regular spinning disks.
If your Mac supports UEFI Bootcamp, and that one would, Apple checks to see if the OS that is booting is OS X, and if it isn’t it turns things off, like the integrated GPU.
With an AMD GPU, you are limited to the shipped drivers from Apple, or the latest that AMD puts out that is labeled for Apple hardware. Which precludes any of the monthly releases, the last one AMD has was released at the same time they released the Omega version of Catalyst. If you forgo this, and install the latest monthly, expect BSODs.
But thats okay, as you wont really notice the increase you will see from this source. Now, about that great trackpad Apple promotes. They only provide a barebones Windows driver for it. The trackpad supports all the features required for the Windows 8/10 touchpad gestures, but Apple simply doesn’t bother enabling it for their competitor’s OS. And you can install something that gives you that functionality back, called trackpad++, but you will need to disable driver signing to do it. Oh, and more BSODs.
Also, the AMD GPUs run hotter than their Nvidia counterparts. I don’t usually care, but in a laptop it makes a difference, since my particular model has had a recall due to the GPU literally
getting so hot that it undoes the soldering on the GPU.
But i’m not bitter. I love my MacBook. (There is NOT an Apple security guard standing over my shoulder making me say that.)
you are supposed to use Apple’s drivers.
If you want a Macbook for OS X, then don’t plan on running Windows on it and get all the benefits of both. I do like OS X, I just wish Apple didn’t feel the need to not support their customers better, by supporting real use cases.
For the same money, you can buy a similar Windows Gaming/Pro laptop, if you want a laptop form factor. If Unreal is going to be a major portion of your life, I recommend a desktop, or at least a dual GPU GTX mobile 9xx series. Like I said, in laptops that heat and power efficiencies matter. (I am actually an AMD fanboy, but I am a realist first and foremost, and that is a huge concern.)
A desktop would be so much better even if you want something portable, as you can fit a really decent card and all the fixins in tiny boxes.