Testseek.com have collected 67 expert reviews of the Razer Blade 14 2016 and the average rating is 81%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Razer Blade 14 2016.
June 2016
(81%)
67 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
If you are looking for something that looks sexy and packs more punch than you have seen in previous gaming laptops, the Razer Blade 2016 edition is something you should definitely check out. Just be prepared to part with some serious cash if you want som...
6 SKUs available, compact and relatively light, very sturdy aluminum case, perfect workmanship, striking-masculine design in a noble black, ports are placed ergonomically, Thunderbolt 3 via USB Type-C, HDMI 2.0, very good WLAN performance, simple to open
fingerprints are clearly visible, unusual keyboard layout, poor key inscriptions, a lot of features cannot be used without registering first (Razer Synapse), below-average mouse buttons, PWM-flickering up to 90% brightness, slow response times, glossy to
Huawei's Nova Plus is a really good smartphone and we can only find few real drawbacks. Besides the bright display you get two really good cameras. Selfie fans will enjoy the front camera in particular. You also get a powerful battery, which actually keep...
Published: 2016-11-19, Author: Stefan , review by: techcrunch.com
Abstract: Razer seems to have figured out how to squeeze in the most power per inch in a laptop. Now in its fourth generation, the Razer Blade 14 has never been more powerful as a personal computer — or better yet, as a gaming laptop fit for any battle station. It...
Still one of the best performance/weight ratios going, New, more subdued typeface, Tweaked internals, including new cooling pattern
The 970M is ooooooold, Can get better performance at the same price if you sacrifice portability
Sure, you can find a similarly spec'd laptop for a few hundred less, but not one that crams this performance into such an ultraportable form factor. Add in USB-C, the promise of the Razer Core, and that PCIe SSD? Pretty snazzy. So if you need a lap...
Beautiful, highresolution display. Thin and light. Excellent cooling system. Thunderbolt 3 with USB Type C connector. Supports external GPU via Razer Core.
Nvidia 9 Series mobile GPU is on its way out. Touch display is useless on a nonconvertible / 2in1 system.
When it comes to graphics performance, the 970M was able to run most modern games at the native 3,200 x 1,800 resolution at medium / normal graphics quality. Bumping up to high / ultra at this resolution resulted in a framerate drop that's below acceptabl...
Solid gaming performance, Sleek, strong design with very rigid chassis, Dazzling RGB LED Chroma keyboard, External graphics support via Razer Core and Thunderbolt 3, IGZO screen is brilliant, and provides touch input (rare among gaming laptops)
Only one M.2 SSD slot limits storage ceiling, Gets hot and loud while gaming on built-in graphics, So-so keyboard feel, No SD-card reader
Razer's flagship gaming laptop stays at the top of its game, gaining NVMe storage, "Skylake" processing, and a fully programmable RGB keyboard—not to mention the spectre of desktop-grade graphics via Razer's Core. Read More…...
Compact and light gaming and pro apps monster. Classy chassis, NVIDIA GTX 1060 graphics, high res touch screen, good keyboard, good battery life for a gaming laptop
Hot and loud when gaming, otherwise pretty well behaved. Multimedia keyboard keys aren't backlit
It's hard not to fall in love with the 2016 Razer Blade, and that's what we like for a machine this expensive. It has an immaculate design that's cool looking yet calm enough to take to work. Performance is very impressive, particularly for something this...
Published: 2016-05-17, Author: Alex , review by: gizmodo.com
Abstract: For years now, the Razer Blade has been the go-to laptop for gamers who want a little style mashed up with their function. The 2016 version is the best yet: Its lighter, faster, and—critically—$400 cheaper. Yup, Razer made its sharpest Blade yet.Advertis...
The Razer Blade fits very high-end components into a slim 14-inch body, and has a programmable multicolored backlit keyboard that can perform all sorts of impressive tricks
Full-size gaming laptops can turn in better gaming scores, and configuration options are minimal. Adding the optional Core external graphics adapter is very expensive
The Razer Blade is a slim gaming laptop that hits a good balance between power and portability, with the intriguing promise of adding a desktop graphics card later on...