This is only a Dealzmodo in the past tense, but Razer just said it's going to honour purchases made with a third party coupon that went viral this week, which gave users 90 per cent off on the Razer UK store. That's kind of astounding. Read More >>
A gaming laptop in a tablet. It's a thought experiment that raises a whole host of questions: Is that even possible? Can it possibly be good? Would anyone even want it if it were? And finally: How much does it cost? The Razer Edge's answers translate roughly to "Yes!", "Sort of.", "Maybe?", and "Erm, you better sit down." Read More >>
Featured comment by warriorscot:
"While you have a bit of a point it is really more of a question of technology and cost being the main limiters. And its mostly cost as the technology ..." More »
The Razer Edge is a gaming tablet. That much you know. But here's the thing: It's so well made — and has such a complete notion of what it is and what it wants to do — that it might not just be "the gaming tablet," but the single best Windows 8 convertible we've seen. Read More >>
Featured comment by EddyCJ:
"Agreed with build quality - looks like the first DS sort of quality - and I had hinges break on all 3 models of that I owned." More »
When we saw it last year, then named Project Fiona, Razer's gaming tablet already felt refined and finished in a way that other tablets have taken another year to catch up to. Now though? It's something totally new. The Razer Edge is a total desktop/gaming computer, shoved into a 10-inch tablet. Read More >>
Featured comment by FRISH:
"The pro seems a little expensive to me tbh. I'd rather get something else with much more performance personally. Still, doesn't seem as overprices as ..." More »
When you're on the hunt in a first-person shooter, the very tiniest fraction of a movement can mean the difference between nailing a shazam headshot and dying. That's why the new 2013 version of the Razer DeathAdder gaming mouse has a 6400 dpi optical sensor, compared to the 3500 dpi infrared sensor on its predecessor. That's, like, almost two-times better, right? Read More >>
Featured comment by FRISH:
"Yes the freezing is also annoying, it doesn't happen that often, but still is a little annoying to plug the wireless thing in and out when it does hap..." More »
A mouse is a fundamental part of every desktop computer. It should just work, at all times. Odd, then, that Razer's high-end Naga gaming mouse does exactly the opposite, requiring an internet connection if you're going to stand any chance of using it. Read More >>
Featured comment by JoeyG410:
"Most games yea, It's alot cheaper than making 2 or 3 different versions of the same game. Going to get the next Sim City though, that look's good to m..." More »
Razer's beautiful Fiona PC gaming tablet thing might end up as an actual product for you to ponder buying, with the hardware maker currently gauging interest in the device outside of the obviously-up-for-it tech nerd demographic. Read More >>
Featured comment by Eldwafio:
"I wish they'd just made the Razer Switchblade or whatever it was called. That diddy gaming laptop with LCD keys looked cool :)" More »
Looks like Denon has taken a just a little bit of inspiration from Razer with their brand new duo of headphones, that look like, well, a Razer gaming mouse got lucky with a pair of Denon headphones around nine months ago. And well, out popped non-identical twins with LEDs and Urban Raver branding too. Read More >>
There's something fundamentally broken in the world of PC laptops: Machines designed nearly four years ago still provide the basic model for how to build one correctly today. The Razer Blade is, in some ways, one of the best Windows laptops I've used in a long time. But I can't decide if it's merely ironic or outright depressing that a PC designed to reinvigorate PCs is ultimately most interesting because it steals something from Apple that most PC makers only wish they could grasp: How to steal like Apple. Read More >>
Featured comment by CaptainLove:
"It would have to be anodised, something Apple certainly has quite a bit of experience with (I'm looking at you, you insatiably desirable iPod Mini), b..." More »
Just stop me when this sounds ridiculous: A tablet. Built for gaming. Like, really built for gaming. With twin analogue joysticks. That are permanently built into it. That's Razer's Project Fiona. And it's more amazing than you think. Read More >>
While it may look like your average Android tablet adorned with a pair of button-festooned handlebars, beneath the shimmering screen of Razer's Project Fiona lurks the beating heart of a high-powered gaming PC. Are we looking at the future of portable gaming? Read More >>