While Razer has traditionally offered the Blade 15 and Blade 17 enthusiast gaming laptops, the company is introducing a new family of Blades at CES 2023 — the Razer Blade 16 and Razer Blade 18.
The new Blade 16 measures 21.99 mm x 244 mm x 355 mm (H x W x D) and weighs 2.45 kg. Razer is offering the Blade 16 in a total of five configurations. All of them offer the 24C/32T Intel Raptor Lake-HX Core i9-13950HX processor as standard but come with a range of Nvidia RTX 40 series Laptop GPU options including the 140 W RTX 4060, 140 W RTX 4070, 175 W RTX 4080, and the 175 W RTX 4090.
Most 2023 Blade 16 SKUs offer a 16:10 QHD+ (2560 x 1600) 500 nits 240 Hz IPS-grade panel with 100% DCI-P3 coverage. However, one of the RTX 4070 SKUs and the lone RTX 4090 SKU exclusively offer what Razer calls a dual-mode mini-LED panel. These dual-mode panels can seamlessly transition between FHD+ (1920 x 1200) 240 Hz Gamer and UHD+ (3840 x 2400) Creator modes depending on the need.
Memory can be upgraded up to 64 GB of DDR5-5600 RAM while two M.2 slots are available that can accommodate up to 4 TB PCIe Gen 4 storage. Port selection includes 1x Thunderbolt 4, 1x USB 3.2 Gen2 Type-C that supports 100 W power delivery, 3x USB 3.2 Gen2 Type-A ports, HDMI 2.1-out, a UHS-II SD card reader, and a combo audio jack.
All Razer Blade 16 models additionally come with a FHD IR webcam with a privacy shutter, Razer Chroma anti-ghosting keyboard, a four-speaker array with THX Spatial Audio certification, and a 6,182 mAh battery. The RTX 4080 and RTX 4090 variants come with a 330 W GaN power adapter while the rest offer a 280 W GaN adapter.
The Razer Blade 16 will be available from Q1 2023 at Razer.com and select retailers starting from US$2,699.99.
Buy the Razer Blade 15 with Core i7-12800H and RTX 3070 Ti on Amazon
Although a cell and molecular biologist by training, I have been drawn towards computers from a very young age ever since I got my first PC in 1998. My passion for technology grew quite exponentially with the times, and it has been an incredible experience from being a much solicited source for tech advice and troubleshooting among family and friends to join Notebookcheck in 2017 as a professional tech journalist. Now, I am a Lead Editor at Notebookcheck covering news and reviews encompassing a wide gamut of the technology landscape for Indian and global audiences. When I am not hunting for the next big story or taking complex measurements for reviews, you can find me unwinding to a nice read, listening to some soulful music, or trying out a new game.
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