Testseek.com have collected 92 expert reviews of the Razer Blade 14 R3 and the average rating is 79%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Razer Blade 14 R3.
January 2014
(79%)
92 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(77%)
258 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
79010092
Reviews
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Published: 2014-06-24, Author: Christopher , review by: wired.com
Still the best way to get gaming to go. Responsive touchscreen and touchpad. Impressive speaker quality. Upped resolution now supports 3200 x 1800 pixels
Dimmer screen is a letdown, as is the price hike. What, no page up/page down keys? One key's backlight died during testing
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(80%)
Published: 2014-06-07, Author: James , review by: mashable.com
Desktop-grade performance in a tiny clamshell frame, Good battery life, Slick design, Gorgeous 3K display...
but you'll never need 3K resolution, Expensive
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Published: 2014-05-20, Author: Sean , review by: theverge.com
Great design, Sharp, high-resolution display, Good touchpad performance
Poor battery life, No SD card slot, Some games don't work at full resolution
Published: 2014-05-09, Author: Scott , review by: cnet.com
The new Razer Blade boasts the same beautifully thin design, but adds a sharp 3,200x1,800 touch display and advanced Nvidia graphics
The battery life is worse than last year's model's. Adding more SSD storage can turn this into a pricey laptop
Razer's newest gaming laptop trades ultralong battery life for a fantastic screen and even better graphics. It's a trade worth making: this is the best Razer gaming laptop, and the best thin gaming PC anywhere....
Published: 2014-01-17, Author: Sean , review by: engadget.com
Fast and powerful, Excellent trackpad, Stellar battery life (for a gaming machine), Slim, compact and thoroughly attractive
Middling screen and audio quality, More expensive (and less powerful) than other machines
Razer's 14-inch Blade is its most powerful laptop to date, not to mention its most affordable. Strong internals, an attractive build and long battery life make it a solid option for gamers and non-gamers alike....
Almost perfect combination of performance and mobility, High build quality, Good battery runtimes, Low weight, Thin chassis
Only available in the US and Canada, Very bad display, Expensive
Another small drawback is the availability; the device is currently only available in the United States and Canada. Potential buyers from other parts of the world will have to import the notebook and use an appropriate power adaptor.Still, we really like...
Solid quality and design, Good keyboard and touchpad, Great gaming performance
Not user upgradeable, Limited port selection, Expensive
The Blade packs a remarkable amount of power into a package as svelte as they come. This 0.66" thin, 4.1 pound notebook can play modern games at higher settings. Other things we like about the Blade include the superb build quality, elegant design, goo...
Alright guys, with testing out of the way, let's go ahead and sum it up. Performance wise, the Blade is exactly what you'd expect from a high performance gaming notebook. With Nvidia's GeForce GTX 765m, the Razer Blade is more than capable of playing all ...
This is very close to a perfect body for a gaming laptop. The Blade is gorgeous and well built. There is zero flex anywhere. It runs current games on high graphics settings at good-to-acceptable framerates. The trackpad is more responsive than the majorit
The mostly awesome trackpad is almost completely submarined by its idiotic buttons. Battery life is hugely improved from your standard gaming rig, but you're getting nowhere near the six hours claimed by Razer. The screen is sub-optimal, on color performa
Yes. The standard line for Razer hardware has usually been, “Hahaha, NO. Unless you lactate liquid gold.” Here, though, the price is still steep, but not insanely steeper than its peers. Toshiba’s KiraBook starts at $1700; the Blade at $1800, and the comp...