The Razer Blade 15 Studio Edition is a departure from Razer's traditional gaming laptops The stylish gaming manufacturer has been making laptops for several years now, but has always put gaming performance first; the Blade 15 Studio Edition has a more creative user in mind, if the laptop's $4,300 starting price is anything to go by, more affluent demographic in mind
Razer announced the Blade 15 Studio Edition in a press release today (May 28), clearly outlining impressive specs for a premium price
First, the Blade 15 Studio Edition is a pretty laptop with a silver casing, a tiny keyboard surrounded by two speakers, and a huge touchpad The keys have RGB backlighting, and the laptop's 4K, 156-inch screen is also touch-sensitive As for ports, there is an SD card reader, two USB-A ports, HDMI out, standard USB-C, and Thunderbolt 3 compatible USB-C For the first time on a Razer system, users can also charge the laptop (albeit slowly) via USB-C via USB-C The system is only 07" thick
The specs also help justify the high asking price: the Blade 15 Studio Edition is powered by an 8-core 10th generation Intel Core i7-10875H processor, an Nvidia Quadro RTX 5000 Studio Edition GPU (16 GB GDDR6 VRAM), and an Nvidia Quadro RTX 5000 Studio Edition GPU (16 GB GDDR6 VRAM) GDDR6 VRAM), 4K OLED touchscreen, 1 B SSD storage, 32 GB RAM, built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth support, 80 Wh battery, and 720p webcam It also has a 35 mm audio jack, so any headset can be used without problems
The only thing that might deter animators and designers is the Blade 15 Studio Edition's price Part of the price is due to components that exceed those found on standard gaming desktops, but the stylish and durable design is also part of the price, which seems to attract a user base that generally prefers Apple products
In terms of design and use, the Blade 15 Studio Edition is not entirely dissimilar to the MacBook Pro 16-inch However, in terms of raw power, the Blade 15 Studio Edition outperforms Apple's competitors in many areas CPU and Radeon Pro graphics in the MacBook Pro, and the 4K OLED screen is a significant improvement over Apple's Quad HD LEDs
Meanwhile, the MacBook Pro 16 is also more affordable, starting at $2,399
Regardless of how the two products stack up directly, it will be interesting to see Razer throw its hat into the productivity laptop ring It may be too expensive to attract a broad user base, or it may be powerful enough to facilitate tasks normally left to desktops The product is currently available in the US and Canada, with worldwide availability expected later this year
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