Product test

Expensive but beautiful gaming pleasure: Razer Blade 15

Martin Jud
23.1.2019
Translation: machine translated
Pictures: David Lee

According to Razer, this is the most compact 15.6-inch gaming laptop in the world. I don't care at first, because I only have eyes for the stylish design. However, Razer not only trumps with size and design, but also with the price. And rightly so?

If I had to award a beauty prize for a gaming notebook, the Razer Blade 15 Mercury White would have a good chance of making it to the top of the podium. But the inner values are also impressive. With an eighth-generation Intel Core i7, 16 GB RAM and a GeForce GTX 1060 Max-Q, nothing should stand in the way of gaming enjoyment.

The technical data:

Design and connections: Not so "white"

1080p display with 144 Hz

Chroma keyboard and large touchpad

Since the notebook's speakers are located right next to the keyboard, a numeric keypad has to be omitted for space reasons. this is not a tragedy for a gaming notebook.

The large glass touchpad measures 13 x 8 cm and responds with absolute precision. It is only marginally smaller than that of a MacBook. Even when I swipe around quickly, the mouse lands exactly where I want it to. Gestures also always work straight away. The integrated click buttons are also very quiet, but require a little more force to trigger compared to other touchpads.

Good notebook speakers

Speakers are usually the Achilles heel of notebooks. So it's refreshing to be able to test a device with good sound. Whereby good is relative. Because even Razer lacks a lot when it comes to reproducing really crisp bass. Nevertheless, I like the sound not only in the mids and highs, but also in the lower frequencies. This also makes gaming and watching films fun without headphones.

Speaking of headphones: when it comes to surround sound, you not only get Windows Sonic here, but Dolby Atmos for Headphones is also pre-installed.

Battery performance

Razer has installed a lithium-polymer battery with 80 Wh. This sounds relatively generous, but it can never be enough power for a performance-hungry gaming notebook, as the following tests show.

Youtube continuous streaming: What does the battery do in reality?

Stress test with HeavyLoad and Furmark

To push all the hardware to its limits, I run the stress test HeavyLoad and FurMark simultaneously with the screen set to maximum brightness. The battery dies after 57 minutes, which is not a good performance.

A word about the noise emission:
The notebook is not audible when working. Under full load, I measured around 53 decibels from a sitting position. Directly behind the notebook it's 64. I measured with a Huawei smartphone.

A day in the office: unfortunately not

The gaming notebook is not suitable as a replacement for my office laptop. Or only if you're lugging the relatively bulky power supply around with you. The battery dies after around 6 hours and 30 minutes of office work.

CPU

The Intel Core i7-8750H is a high-performance mobile 64-bit hexa-core high-end processor. It was introduced at the beginning of 2018 and is based on the Coffee Lake microarchitecture. It is manufactured using Intel's improved third-generation 14 nm++ process.

The i7-8750H employees at a clock speed of 2.2 GHz and has a TDP of 45 W. It also has a turbo boost of up to 4.1 GHz. The processor supports up to 64 GB DDR4-2666 RAM (dual channel). The chip is also equipped with Intel's UHD Graphics 630 GPU.

Graphics card

The mobile high-end GPU Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 Max-Q is based on the Pascal architecture. It has 6 GB GDDR5 video RAM (connection via 192-bit interface). It is manufactured using the 16 nm process and operates at a frequency of 1063 MHz (boost up to 1480 MHz). The power consumption of the card is 80 watts. The performance of the card may vary depending on the cooling system and housing used.

Performance

To test the performance, I ran various benchmarks; Cinebench R15, 3DMark Fire Strike and Time Spy as well as the in-game benchmark of "Far Cry 5". In addition, a game round of "Battlefield V" shows what is possible in terms of fps in a current AAA title.

Cinebench R15

With Cinebench R15 from Maxon, you can test how your PC performs when rendering Cinema 4D content. Processors with more cores will always deliver a better result. If you want to compare processors with Cinebench R15, this is only possible if both processors have the same number of threads.

How the Razer Blade 15 Mercury White performs:

The Razer Blade achieves 100.11 fps when rendering with OpenGL. This is somewhat surprising, as the MSI GS65 Stealth Thin 8RF-292 with GeForce GTX 1070 Max-Q achieves 101.05 fps here. So Razer is doing something right if the same result can be achieved with less powerful hardware.

The CPU score of 912 points is a little less great. Here, both the MSI notebook mentioned above and the Asus ROG Zephyrus with the same processor deliver better performance: MSI achieves 1102 points and Asus 1131 points.

3DMark Fire Strike

The Fire Strike benchmark from 3DMark can be used to test and compare gaming PCs. It renders in 1080p using DirectX 11.

3DMark Time Spy

In contrast to Fire Strike, the Time Spy benchmark runs with DirectX 12 and is rendered with a resolution of 2560 x 1440 pixels.

The Razer notebook achieves 3656 points. You can view the result here online. An average gaming notebook scores 3879 points in this benchmark. Incidentally, the MSI GS65 Stealth Thin 8RF-292 with GeForce GTX 1070 Max-Q achieves 4746 points in this benchmark.

In-game benchmark "Far Cry 5"

In "Far Cry 5", the benchmark only reflects a real game to a limited extent, as there are no quick turns. I set the graphics quality to the highest possible level at 1080p resolution.

The average 61 fps achieved is a very good result. To draw another comparison with the MSI notebook with GTX 1070 Max-Q; this achieves an average of 62 fps with the same quality settings. The Zenbook Pro (GTX 1050) only achieves 42 fps with the same quality settings.

"Battlefield V"

First of all, I would like to point out that the keyboard also makes a good hand warmer while gaming. The device gets relatively hot directly behind the keyboard. You can just about touch it without burning yourself. But there's not much missing to be able to fry a rösti with a fried egg.

For once, I'll leave the fun part of my work to my colleague Raphael Knecht. He puts his heart and soul into playing "Battlefield V" and cheers like a world champion with every headshot.

Of course, gaming alone is not enough, so Raphael also has to do some work. Here are the results - this is what the Razer Blade with 1080p resolution and 144 Hz delivers in terms of fps:

Not bad at all. So you can confidently play current titles in top quality with a resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels.

Conclusion: Beautiful, powerful, but too expensive

In view of the fact that the first notebooks with ray-tracing-capable graphics cards are already in the starting blocks, I would advise against buying one. Or at least advise you to wait and see. I can well imagine that the price of this notebook will fall in the coming weeks or months.

If you can't wait that long, you should just bear in mind that the battery in this laptop doesn't perform brilliantly. But which gaming notebook can last longer than one or two hours of gaming?

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I find my muse in everything. When I don’t, I draw inspiration from daydreaming. After all, if you dream, you don’t sleep through life.


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