The new 14” Razer Blade strikes the perfect balance between power and portability. Get faster, smoother and more detailed gameplay with the powerful performance of the next generation NVIDIA® GeForce® GTX 1060 graphics. Choose from two great display options, Full HD or QHD+, or connect a VR headset for an even more immersive gaming experience. Get the best-in-class performance with 6th Gen Intel® Core™ i7 quad-core processing, 16GB of dual-channel memory, and PCIe-based SSD storage up to 1TB. All this power packed into a thin and light 0.70” unibody aluminum chassis is what makes the Razer Blade the best in its class.
Razer, in particular, has the been leading the charge toward more modern-feeling gaming laptops for some time, fitting high-end parts into very slim cases with tastefully understated designs. The latest gaming flagship from the company is an updated 14-inch system called the Razer Blade (get it?), an update to last year's identically named version.
Like last year's version, the graphics power still comes from an Nvidia GeForce GTX 970m graphics card, which is one step down from the current top-end of the mobile graphics stack. The major change for the 2016 edition is a new Core i7-6700HQ processor from Intel's sixth-generation of Core i-series CPUs. Plus, the 2016 version trims a bit from both the system weight and its starting price, at 4.2 pounds and $1,999 in the US. (The 2016 version of the Razer Blade is not available to buy yet internationally, but that works out to £1,383 in the UK and AU$2,731 in Australia.)
RAZER BLADE (14-INCH, 2016)
Price as reviewed | $1,999 |
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Display size/resolution | 14-inch 3,200x1,800 touchscreen |
PC CPU | 2.6GHz Intel Core i7-6700HQ |
PC memory | 16GB DDR4 SDRAM 2133MHz |
Graphics | Nvidia GeForce GTX 970M |
Storage | 256GB PCIe SSD |
Networking | 802.11ac wireless, Bluetooth 4.1 |
Operating system | Windows 10 Home (64-bit) |
Unlike most other gaming laptops, there's only one user-configuration choice to make on the Blade. The stock model has 256GB of solid state storage, but for $200 more, you can double that to 512GB.
The only other real option to consider is whether you want the sold-separately Razer Core. Announced in January at CES 2016 and expected shortly, the Razer Core is an external box built to house a single desktop graphics card (for example, an Nvidia GeForce GTX 980), and route its graphics rendering power to the laptop via Thunderbolt-enabled USB-C connection. (That single wire will also handle power duties, too.) It's $499, or $399 if purchased with a Razer laptop. That sounds like a lot for an external housing box, especially if you have to bring your own GPU -- but it also provides a way to get this laptop to work with high-end desktop-only virtual reality headsets like the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive.
The Razer Core will also work with the 13-inch Razer Blade Stealth. That system lacks its own graphics card, but it starts at just $999 and can be configured with either a 2,560x1,440-pixel or a full 4K display. The touchscreen display here has a single resolution option, 3,200x1,800.
By itself, the Blade is slim enough for everyday on-the-go use, but powerful enough for gaming, video editing, and other serious tasks. The look is not exactly buttoned-down, but the matte-black shell, rigid construction, and minimalist design don't scream "gamer," even if the green snake-like logo on the back of the lid does. If everyone you work with wears a tie, this might not blend into the corporate culture. If people bring their dogs to work and your office has either bean bag chairs or a foosball table, it should fit in just fine.