Razer has created a wonderful creature. Last year the company launched its first ever game playing laptop computer with a unique additional LCD screen that does dual purpose as an in-game dash panel and game playing track pad. The $2,499 second-gen Razer Knife maintains the thin, attractive information of its forerunner, while thumping up the speed. Enhanced specifications include a newly-released Apple Primary i7 processer and Nvidia GTX design. But does this Knife have what it takes to piece and cut the competition?
Design
Above the keyboard is a large pulsating power button, and above that, just below the screen, is a thin speaker grille. Like the lid, the notebook's interior is also made of black aluminum, which makes the emerald green backlit keyboard and power button pop.
The underside of the notebook also has a hint of dramatic flair, thanks to the diamond-cut heating vents.
At 6.6 pounds and 0.88 inches thick, the Razer Blade is by far the lightest and thinnest gaming notebook on the market. It's slightly lighter than the 15-inch 15.4 x 10.4 x 1-inch Macbook Pro which weighs 6.8 pounds. The 16.1 x 11.9 x 1.75-inch Alienware M17x R4, by comparison, tips the scales at 9.8 pounds and is twice as thick. The 16.2 x 10.9 x 1.7-1.8-inch Origin Eon 17S and the 16.3 x 12.6 x 0.9-2-inch Samsung Series 7 Gamer weigh 8.2 and 8.4 pounds respectively.
The Blade's power brick is also a marvel of design.The diminutive 5.75 x 2.25 x 0.6-inch brick weighs 10.6 ounces but still manages to deliver the necessary 120W of power. The 18.4-inch Alienware M18x R2's power brick weighs a whopping 2.4 pounds. Razer even managed to spice up the brick by adding its insignia on the front.
Display
Borderlands 2's cel-shaded graphics were breathtaking on the Blade. The frozen wastelands of the opening stage was at once beautiful and terrifying. The gray overcast sky added to the abject loneliness of a world populated by stark white ice crags and shaggy gray beasts with fur mottled red from their last kill.
However, when compared side by side, the Alienware M17x R4's display delivered a more vivid vista. This was most evident when day turned to night and an undulating Aurora Borealis danced above our heads.
When we watched the 1080p trailer of "The Master," Joaquin Phoenix's skin tone looked more lifelike on the M17x, but the Razer Blade displayed the tiniest imperfections in the actor's skin.
The Blade's 256 lux display is slightly higher than the 250 lux desktop replacement average. However, it's a little dim compared to the Eon 17S, M17x and Series 7 Gamer which scored 262, 282 and 325 lux, respectively.
Audio
When we listened to Wale's "Lotus Flower Bomb," the organs sounded right at the edge of distortion at maximum volume. The rapper's raspy delivery was a perfect counterbalance to the sultry hook sung by Miguel.
Keyboard
As we typed, the keys delivered nice springy feedback. We scored 47 words per minute on the Ten Thumbs Typing Test with a 1 percent error rate. That's slightly higher than our normal 45 wpm/1 percent error rate.
One of the keyboard's best features is that it's completely customizable. That means you can record macros and map them to any button on the keyboard, a big plus for gamers that like to create custom controls. A special button emblazoned with the company logo works in tandem with the special features of the touchpad.
Touchpad
The LCD multitouch track panel performed well with precise navigation on websites and documents. Highlighting text was also seamless. Multitouch gestures including pinch-to-zoom, two-finger scroll, three-finger press and flick were smooth as well.
The glossy black plastic discrete mouse buttons are a little on the thin side, but they delivered firm feedback during our use.
Switchblade Interface
When we first activated the Switchblade interface (we had to create a free Razer account), the keys were illuminated with bright colorful icons for a screenshot button, game timer, Gmail, Twitter, Facebook, and a Web browser, among others. Pressing the Facebook button, for instance, brought up the mobile version of Facebook on the touchpad, where we could log into our account.
Users can also create up to 10 pages of personal shortcuts with their own custom icons. You can switch between pages by performing a three-finger swipe on the touch pad. Returning to the home page is a simple as pressing the Razer button next to the touchpad.
Launching the web browser, YouTube and other social networking buttons instantly transforms the track panel into a 800 x 480-pixel display, complete with touchscreen capabilities such as pinch-to-zoom and scroll. However, text on the smaller display is difficult to read without zooming in, and once we did zoom in, text was riddled with jagged edges.
However, we appreciated the ability to launch applications on the screen without exiting our games on the main screen.During our time with the Blade, we used the YouTube app to find video of a particular challenge in Borderlands 2. We also used the Snapshot button to capture some of our more gloat-worthy moments.
Synapse 2.0 Software
Razer included groups of macros for Team Fortress 2, Battlefield 3, Star Wars: The Old Republic and Counter Strike: Global Offense. Used in tandem with the titles, these game profiles streamline certain functions, shaving seconds off your reaction time. For example, the Battlefield 3 macros let you quickly switch between weapons and fast access to equipment. The Team Fortress 2 macros support every character class, mapping their abilities to the 10 buttons.
We also created a Borderlands 2 custom profile. We started by tricking the touchpad out with some cool Borderlands 2 wallpaper. From there we created a custom icon using more promotion art. We then recorded our custom macros and mapped them to our preferred buttons, linking them to the profile. The process is fairly straightforward, but mapping macros can become a deeply involved project depending on the level of customization.
On the plus side, Razer stores your profiles in the cloud, eliminating the need to recreate them every time you use a new notebook or mouse. Razer also says that customers will be able to share profiles they create for the Switchblade UI with other Blade owners, much the same way that owners of its gaming mice can share profiles with others.
Heat
Things heated up as we played Batman: Arkham City. The touchpad measured 86 degrees, and the space between the G and H keys rose to 99 degrees. We consider anything above 95 uncomfortable, so were disappointed that the underside soared to 108 degrees when playing this title.
Webcam
Although the Blade comes with a 2-megapixel webcam, Razer neglected to include any accompanying software. Nevertheless, when we took a test shot using Skype, we saw a pleasing and rich warmth in our skin tone. In addition, details were fairly sharp; we could see a few flyaway hairs in the shot.Ports
The Blade is relatively light on ports. A lone secure lock slot sits on the notebook's right. The left side houses a trio of USB 3.0 ports, HDMI, Gigabit Ethernet and jacks for headphones and the AC adapter. Frustratingly, Razer did not inlcude an SD Card slot.Gaming and Graphics
On the 3DMark11 benchmark, the Blade scored 2,623. That's 602 points less than the 3,238 desktop replacement average. The Samsung Series 7 Gamer and the Origin Eon 17S, which both have Nvidia GeForce GTX 675M GPUs with 2GB of VRAM, scored 3,651 and 3,502, respectively. The Alienware M17x R4 and its dual GTX 680M GPU posted a scorching 6,158.
The Blade averaged 104 fps in World of Warcraft at native resolution (1920 x 1080), with graphics on autodetect. That's fast but 80 frames behind the 184 fps category average. The Series 7 Gamer scored 167 fps while the Eon 17S delivered 232 fps. The M17x R4 posted 279 fps, blowing the competition away. When we cranked it up to maximum, the Blade notched 51 fps, falling short of the 97 fps category average. The Eon 17S scored 129 fps followed by the Series 7 Gamer at 135 fps. The M17x R4 delivered a whopping 147 fps.
At maximum settings, the Blade dropped to an unplayable 24 fps, failing to match the 38 fps average. The M17x R4 continued to shine with 52 fps, while the Eon 17S and the Series 7 Gamer were tied at 30 fps.
We also spent a few hours blasting Bullymongs and Marauders in Borderlands 2. When we ran the game on its highest settings (1920 x 1080p, FXAA On, Antisotrophic Flitering 8x), we saw an average frame rate of 41 fps. When we turned Antisotrophic Flitering down to 4x, the frame rate average rose to 56 fps, and when we disabled filtering, the Blade notched 70 fps.
Performance
The notebook also held its own during our benchmark tests, notching 4,554 on PCMark 7. That's 902 points above the 3,652 desktop replacement category average. The Samsung Series 7 and its 2.3-GHz Intel Core i7-3610QM quad-core CPU only managed 3,611. The Alienware M17x R4 (2.6-GHz Core i7-3720QM CPU) was only slightly faster than the Razer at 4,610. However, the Origin Eon 17S took top billing with a score of 5,602, thanks to its 2.9-GHz Intel Core i7-3920XM processor.
Relying on a hybrid drive (500GB 7,200-rpm hard drive with 64GB SSD), the Blade booted the 64-bit version of Windows 7 Home Premium in 25 seconds. That was more than enough to smoke the 0:52 average as well as the Series 7 Gamer (dual 750GB 7,200-rpm hard drives) and the M17x R4's (500GB 7,200-rpm and 32GB SSD cache) times of 0:42 and 0:34. The Eon 17S (dual 120GB SSDs in RAID 0 configuration and 1TB 5,400-rpm hard drive) stopped the clock at a blistering 0:17.
On the OpenOffice Spreadsheet Macrotest, the Blade paired 20,000 names to their matching addresses in 4 minutes and 34 seconds, slightly longer than the 4:22 category average. The M17x R4 completed the task in 4:10 while the Eon 17S continued to dominate with a time of 3:17.
Battery Life
Configurations
Our $2,499 review model of the Razer Blade features a 2.2-GHz quad-core Intel Core i7-3632QM CPU, 8GB of RAM, a 500GB 7,200-rpm hard drive with a 64GB SSD cache and a Nvidia GTX 660M GPU with 2GB of VRAM.The original Blade is priced at $2,299 and has a 2.8-GHz Intel Core i7-2640 processor with 8GB of RAM, a 256GB SSD and Nvidia GT 555M processor with 2GB or VRAM. Razer is giving their early adopter customers a $500 discount on the new Blade, dropping the price to $1,999.
Verdict
That brings us to the real question gamers will need to answer: How much is mobility and a second screen worth? For the same $2,499 price of the Razer Blade, you can get an Alienware M17x with a Core i7-3610QM CPU, a 3D-enabled 1080p display, Nvidia GTX 680M graphics, and a 1TB hard drive in RAID 0. However, the M17x is more than 3 pounds heavier--not including its power brick. Bottom line: those looking for the most gaming muscle on the go will love this machine.

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