Razer’s Blade Pro 17 has sights on the future, but is stuck in the present
Enthusiast gaming laptops are still just out of reach
Razer’s
latest Blade Pro 17 offers a glimpse into the future of gaming laptops.
It’s one of the few to have a 17.3-inch 4K touchscreen with a 120Hz
refresh rate; that’s an elusive combination of screen specs that’s tough
to find in a standalone monitor, let alone integrated into a gaming
laptop. With it, you can get the best visual quality, and the high
refresh rate makes your content move more fluidly across the screen than
your average laptop screen can manage.
For a while now, gaming laptops have been built with
capable hardware, effectively mirroring the performance of a desktop,
but of course, without the massive tower in tow. High refresh rate
screens on laptops are nothing new, either. Gaming laptops with 144Hz
refresh rates hover around the $1,300 mark, though with lower quality
panels than you’ll get if you spend more. But for enthusiast gamers who
don’t want to compromise on visual fidelity, the lack of a 4K — or even
2K — resolution screen with a 120Hz refresh rate, thus far at least,
means that they haven’t yet earned the moniker of a true gaming desktop
replacement. Razer wants to change that, and the Blade Pro 17 is
certainly a step in the right direction, but ambition gets the best of
this machine.
Part of that is because this $3,699 laptop relies on
parts that you can get in a far more affordable laptop. It has a
hexa-core processor (Intel’s i7-9750H with a base clock speed of 2.6Ghz;
you’ll find this in many budget-friendly gaming laptops) when, ideally,
it should have an octa-core i9. It has 16GB of RAM, which wasn’t the
sole root of any issue that I could see, but Razer, please give me more
RAM in exchange for my small fortune.
This machine relies on the Nvidia RTX 2080 Max-Q graphics
chip; a laptop graphics card that allows the Blade Pro to stay thin,
but limits its power compared to a larger machine with a desktop GPU,
like the Alienware Area 51m.
The 2080 Max-Q isn’t a slouch, and it plays a big role in this laptop
being able to play every game that I threw at it at a playable frame
rate. But this combination of specs just isn’t enough to simultaneously
power the latest games at maximum settings and take full advantage of
its 4K / 120Hz display.
As we saw with the Acer Predator X27
monitor, which has a 4K screen with 144Hz refresh rate, not even fully
powered desktop versions of the RTX 2080 and RTX 2080 Ti GPUs are
capable enough to run games well beyond 60 frames per second at 4K. So,
if we’re still that far off in desktop land, we’re even further away
from that being a reality for laptops.
If the end goal of this laptop is for it to be powerful
enough to run games in 4K, and at a high enough frame rate to see its
120Hz refresh rate display in action, Razer’s Blade Pro 17 is more of an
amateur than a pro at its biggest selling point. It works far better
with the resolution turned down to 1440p (and with other graphical
settings turned down), but at this price, that’s a compromise that you
shouldn’t have to make.
This sparks an interesting question, though: why aren’t
there gaming laptops with 1440p screens with a 120Hz refresh rate?
Despite the popularity of fast-refreshing 1440p standalone monitors,
that tech hasn’t trickled down to laptops. Given that manufacturers have
mastered the art of making great 144Hz 1080p panels, and in the case of
this laptop here, an even better 120Hz 4K display, the lack of
available 1440p panels is odd. That’s a shame because the Blade Pro 17
operates favorably when running games at 1440p resolution, and if you’re
accustomed to staring at 1080p screens, the jump up to 2K is a
noticeable improvement, even if it’s not quite as sharp as 4K.
Razer’s Blade chassis in general gets a lot right. It’s
black all around (except for the glowing Razer logo on the lid) and
matte-textured, and both qualities give it a clean, sophisticated look.
It has a large, centered trackpad that is a joy to use, thanks to its
Windows Precision drivers. And whether you’re gaming or casually
browsing, Razer’s big laptop is surprisingly lap-friendly. It doesn’t
get too hot, unless you’re really taxing it, and heat dissipates through
its back near the hinge, so your legs or fingers won’t get fried. Razer
says that this laptop is meant to be used as a desktop replacement, so
ideally, you’ll be able to keep it plugged in at all times. Otherwise,
don’t expect much out of the battery: it’s a 70.5Wh cell, and you’ll be
lucky to get two hours of use from it away from its 230W wall charger.
For such a slim laptop (19.9mm thick), this machine is
packed with ports, including three USB 3.2 Type-A Gen 2 ports (two on
the left, one on the right); a USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 port on its left side;
one Thunderbolt 3 port on its right; an HDMI port; a headphone jack;
Ethernet; and a space for Razer’s proprietary power plug. That’s all
great, but what gets the biggest nod out of me here is the SD card
reader, which supports super fast UHS-III transfer speeds. Every laptop
aimed at professional whatever-your-trade-is should have one of these (Apple disagrees).
Razer’s
laptops usually come with some undeniable perks like Thunderbolt 3
ports and impressive design, but I have a few qualms from past Blade
models that still go unanswered here. First, this laptop attracts all of
the fingerprints, so enjoy it as it comes out of the box while you can.
Thankfully, that can be wiped away with some isopropyl alcohol, but
what can’t be fixed so easily is the awful key arrangement in the lower
right corner. Razer places the up arrow in between the forward slash and
the shift keys, and I tripped up on it about once every five minutes.
When I’m typing an email, this means my text will appear on the line
above. I don’t have a solution for Razer, but thankfully, there is a
tremendous amount of space surrounding the keyboard to experiment, since
there isn’t a numpad.
I spent most of my time with the Razer Blade Pro 17 playing The Outer Worlds and Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, two different kinds of games that tax the system in different ways. The Outer Worlds
isn’t the most graphically demanding game ever made, but it has to load
in a lot of visuals and other data to account for the vast environment
and nonlinear gameplay. The new Star Wars game, on the other
hand, is a linear game with lots of closed-in corridors (at least by
comparison), and emphasis is placed on top-notch textures, particle
effects, and physics.
This laptop can run both games at 4K resolution with all of the graphics settings turned to the max, but the results vary. In The Outer Worlds,
the frame rate fluctuated between 30 and 50 frames per second with
v-sync switched off, both of which are playable frame rates for this
kind of game. Fallen Order kept a relatively steady 40 frames
per second at its maximum settings, again a playable clip. This laptop’s
120Hz refresh rate means that the 120 frames per second is the ceiling
that it can display, and neither game comes close, which is a big
disappointment.
The screen also lacks G-Sync support, Nvidia’s technology
that syncs the screen with the graphics chip to provide a smoother
picture with less input lag than traditional v-sync puts out. That would
have made this laptop’s frame rate fluctuations less jarring, and
nowadays, I expect it to be in any premium gaming laptop that claims to
care about screen quality and gaming performance.
Where the Blade Pro 17 makes its mark is with gaming
performance locked to 1440p resolution. While keeping all other graphics
settings set to their highest options, The Outer Worlds jumps up to nearly 100 frames per second (hovering between 70 and 100), while Star Wars
achieves over 60 frames per second most of the time (dipping below 40
fps and rising above 80 at times). It’s rewarding to see both games
start to take advantage of the high refresh rate display — at 1440p, no
less. Little details that you might have missed on a 1080p display, like
Fallen Order protagonist Cal’s hair looking fine and blowing
in the wind, as well as bigger ones, like the responsive controls, come
to the forefront of the experience.
But still, without some major graphical tweaks, you’re
not going to hit the screen’s ceiling at 4K resolution. I was eventually
able to get there with some compromises that don’t impact my enjoyment
of either game, but compromise is a dirty word when you spend over $3K
on a laptop. You won’t run up on these limitations as much if you
primarily play games like Dota 2 or Overwatch. But it
will likely be a recurring issue as your ever-growing backlog fills up
with recent games that are graphically demanding.
What gets none of my ire is the display itself. It’s a
touchscreen with 254 pixels per inch that offers generous viewing
angels, and whether you’re gaming or not, contrast and colors pop with
accuracy. When it comes to running through various work tasks, flipping
through desktops in Windows 10, and running a couple dozen Chrome tabs
with Slack and Spotify running in the background, this machine is able
to hold its own — and the display is a sharp, spacious, and
touch-friendly canvas to view it all on. At home, I use a 1080p gaming
monitor with a 240Hz refresh rate, and while I would pick a high refresh
rate over resolution for gaming any day, it’s great (and spoiling) to
have the best of both worlds with Razer’s display. However, given that
this machine can more handily run demanding games at 1440p than at 4K,
I’d still be happy if Razer went with a 1440p screen, especially if it
led to a lower price.
Razer’s laptop offers brief and jarring glimpses into the
future of mobile computing. If you’re a hardcore gamer, there are
rarely any moments when games look better than I’ve ever seen them.
Since this machine will likely remain parked at your desk, I would have
gladly accepted a thicker design for a more powerful desktop GPU (a la
Alienware’s Area 51m) if it meant that it could get closer to reaching
its 4K / 120Hz claims.
But
if you can look past that, and are fine with turning down the
resolution to game at a smooth clip, you’ll be hard pressed to find a
display that’s this impressive in another similarly priced laptop any
time soon — especially one with such a stacked, capable set of ports and
a fast SD card reader.
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