Razer Blade (2017) review

Stronger and longer lasting – and now in 4K

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When it comes to performance, we shouldn’t expect a ton more out of the Razer Blade in terms of graphical prowess than the previous model, as nothing about the dedicated graphics hardware has changed. 

That said, we should at least see a boost to battery life, this model being a 1080p device like what we’ve tested previously, only with a supposedly more efficient processor.

Razer Blade 2016

Benchmarks

Here’s how the new Razer Blade performed in our suite of benchmark tests:

3DMark Time Spy: 3,559; Sky Diver: 23,998; Fire Strike: 9,304
Cinebench CPU: 737 points; Graphics: 96 fps
GeekBench: 3,883 (single-core); 14,357 (multi-core)
PCMark 8 (Home Test): 3,465 points
PCMark 8 Battery Life: 4 hours and 8 minutes
Battery Life (TechRadar movie test): 7 hours and 29 minutes
The Division (1080p, Ultra): 51 fps; (1080p, Low): 120 fps
GTA V (1080p, Ultra): 38 fps; (1080p, Low): 146 fps

Performance

With the results in, the new Razer Blade offers exactly what we’d expect from it over the previous model: a modest uptick in performance to a machine that can already run most PC games quite well at high detail settings. You can see these modest boosts across the spectrum of the laptop’s benchmark results.

You have 800 more points in the Fire Strike test than last time, five more frames per second (fps) out of The Division at its Ultra detail preset and five more fps in Grand Theft Auto V, too, at the highest settings. If you’re looking to upgrade your Razer Blade from the previous model, you’re only going to see a mildly noticeable improvement in gaming performance.

And, no, the incredibly loud fan noise when the laptop is running a game has not gone away, so prepare to play with headphones. Granted, the speakers are admirably placed and powerful, but little can compete with those whirring fans.

While this won’t be a giant upgrade for Blade fanatics, folks that are coming from a Blade or other gaming laptop released two years ago should see a dramatic improvement. When compared against similarly-specced rivals, much of the same is true. 

The differences between the new Blade’s numbers and those of the Alienware 13 and Aero 14 are so small that we could chalk them up to anomalies. You will generally get the same level of gaming performance from all three of these machines pushing to 1080p displays.

At the very least, this makes your purchase decision that much easier. So, perhaps the topic of longevity can make this decision even clearer.

Razer Blade 2016

Battery life

The Razer Blade has grown to become one of the more respected gaming laptops in the battery life department. The previous model boasted impressive longevity for what’s inside, and this update doubles down on that.

This model’s PCMark 8 Battery Life result saw an increase by more than 30 minutes, lasting for a total of 4 hours and 8 minutes at 50% screen brightness simulating basic tasks. On our own battery test that loops 1080p video at 50% volume and screen brightness, the laptop ran  for a whopping 7 hours and 29 minutes, more than two hours longer than the previous model. 

To put that into perspective, this is 5 minutes longer than the new 13-inch MacBook Pro lasted on the same test (!!!), and far outclasses both the Dell and Gigabyte laptops. Considering Dell and Gigabyte’s products house larger batteries than Razer’s, we chalk this up to poor optimization. As for the MacBook Pro, well, it does feature a sharper screen by default.

Few, if any, gaming laptops can boast battery life this long, so this is not a detail to be overlooked.

Razer Blade 2016

Chroma continues to woo

This is definitely not the first Razer Blade to contain the company’s popular Chroma keyboard, but it’s by no means any less impressive. Loaded with the same software that owners of Chroma desktop keyboards use, the keyboard sports all individually-lit keys that can display any of 16.8 million colors.

You can assign a unique color to each key on the board through this software, allowing you to highlight your most-used keys (i.e. WASD) or color code them for specific gameplay layouts (e.g. in different MOBA and strategy games). You can save these key color assignments across profiles, naturally. Chroma directly plays into some of the more mainstream PC games, like Overwatch, to activate lights in response to specific in-game events.

But, most importantly, this by far remains the most mechanically improved version of Razer's notebook keyboard to date. The key travel doesn’t feel much deeper than rivaling devices, but the feedback was far improved in 2016, and in all it remains one of the best-feeling laptop keyboards around.

We liked

While there isn’t much about this Razer Blade that’s brand new for 2017, we appreciate the consistency in design and build quality while offering a performance boost in every category. Much longer battery life and slightly stronger game performance in an otherwise unchanged shell? When it looks like the Razer Blade, we’ll take it.

We disliked

That said, the Blade is getting to the point in its design refinement that these incremental updates are bound to get boring. We’d love to see Razer implement more interesting ideas into its Blade line without interrupting its primary functions, like the mechanical keyboard found inside the Blade Pro or – not that we’re at all asking for a direct corollary – the MacBook Pro’s Touch Bar. 

Oh, and the Blade could stand to quiet down considerably while gaming. Just one more thing: please drop the trackpad buttons for a single button solution or a clickpad?

Final verdict

This year’s Razer Blade improves upon the performance put forth by the previous model in nearly every category. From general productivity to gaming and massive battery life gains in between, the new Blade does them all better than the 2016 model.

For that, Razer should be commended for continuing to perfect and refine its formula for the ultra-luxury gaming laptop. However, we’re also left wondering what’s next, as this update hasn’t drastically improved much about the device in the way that the 2016 update introduced tangible new features, like Thunderbolt 3.

At any rate, the new Razer Blade is a marked improvement upon the previous, and is arguably the best luxury gaming laptop there is. As such, it easily gets outpriced by cheaper rivals for similar performance, but you’ll be hard pressed to find a better looking and feeling – or thinner – gaming laptop than this.

Joe Osborne

Joe Osborne is the Senior Technology Editor at Insider Inc. His role is to leads the technology coverage team for the Business Insider Shopping team, facilitating expert reviews, comprehensive buying guides, snap deals news and more. Previously, Joe was TechRadar's US computing editor, leading reviews of everything from gaming PCs to internal components and accessories. In his spare time, Joe is a renowned Dungeons and Dragons dungeon master – and arguably the nicest man in tech.