Tech Advisor

Razer Blade Stealth 13

Price: £1,899 (inc VAT) from fave.co/39UbqB7

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The Razer Blade Stealth 13 is the smallest gaming laptop from one of the biggest brands, and it’s long been an intriguing option for portable gaming because high-end hardware and slimline laptops don’t often mix.

As GPUs have become more efficient, though, lightweigh­t gaming laptops have become more feasible – and

Razer bolsters the latest Blade with an upgraded 11th-gen Intel Tiger Lake processor, too.

The model I’ve reviewed costs a hefty £1,899, which is far more than the Blade’s main rival. The Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 (see page 71) arrived to huge acclaim, and that costs just £1,199 for an equivalent specificat­ion.

Design

The Razer Blade Stealth 13 looks fantastic – because it’s effectivel­y a larger Razer laptop that’s been shrunk down. That means an all-aluminium body with a matte black finish and a glossy, dark Razer logo on the lid.

It’s classy and more discreet than the Asus – that laptop looks great, too, but it’s more ostentatio­us thanks to its extra venting and angles. The only issue is the Razer’s edges, which can be sharp.

Its mature look is paired with tremendous build quality – it’s rock-solid. It’s all the more impressive when the Blade’s 1.41kg weight, 16mm depth and 306mm width are considered – the Asus is heavier, thicker and wider.

The Razer has two USB-C ports that support Thunderbol­t 4 and charging, which means you can power the Blade from both sides. Beyond that, connectivi­ty is underwhelm­ing – there are two full-size USB 3.1 ports with a modest maximum bandwidth of 5Gbit/s, a headphone jack, and that’s it.

There’s no card reader, wired networking or HDMI output, so you’ll have to rely on a USB-C hub or dock for those.

Elsewhere, the Razer has a 720p webcam with Windows Hello support, and internal connectivi­ty comes from dual-band Wi-Fi 6 (11ax). It’s easy to remove the base with a Torx screwdrive­r, and the NVMe SSD and wireless card are both accessible, but the memory is soldered.

The Asus doesn’t have a webcam or Thunderbol­t, but it does have a memory slot, an HDMI output and faster USB-C ports.

Keyboard

The Razer Blade Stealth 13 has a chiclet keyboard without a numberpad. It’s got a decent layout – the function row has media, brightness and backlighti­ng options, the cursor keys have been slimmed down to accommodat­e a bigger

right-shift button, and there’s a doubleheig­ht Return key.

The buttons are crisp and consistent, but they’re shallow and push down into a robust base. For everyday typing they’re fine, although after long sessions the base can feel uncomforta­ble. For gaming, the lack of travel and feedback means the buttons feels flat – they’re fine for casual, mainstream and slower titles, but the Asus provides more travel and a more satisfying experience.

The keyboard also has some minor issues elsewhere. While it does have RGB LED backlighti­ng, it’s single-zone lighting not per-key illuminati­on as you might expect at this price. The power button sits on the keyboard, which could prove irritating.

The trackpad is absolutely fine: big, smooth and accurate, with fast, clicky buttons. As ever, though, a gaming mouse is better for gaming.

Display

The Blade Stealth 13 is one of the smallest laptops with a 120Hz display – the ROG Zephyrus G14 has one too, but that panel is 0.7in larger. The Razer doesn’t have syncing, but the triplefigu­re refresh rate is high enough to deliver smooth gaming in single-player titles and mainstream e-sports games.

The Blade’s brightness level of 354 nits is good enough for any indoor situation and for some outdoor scenarios, and it combines with a decent black level of 0.29 nits to create a contrast ratio of 1221:1. That’s good for an IPS screen, and it creates a well-balanced display: there’s great vibrancy without oversatura­tion, and darker areas have decent depth.

The excellent Delta E of 1.2 ensures top-notch colour accuracy. The colour temperatur­e of 5,981K is a little warm, but it doesn’t cause problems. And, while the Razer’s display handles a solid 94.2 per cent of the sRGB gamut,

it cannot handle the DCI-P3 or Adobe RGB colour spaces.

For gaming and media playback, the Blade’s display is great – smooth, accurate and bright, with a resolution that won’t overly tax the GPU.

The speakers are positioned either side of the keyboard and are reasonably loud, with a crisp, clear high-end. The mid-range is a bit muffled and there’s not much bass, but they’re serviceabl­e for casual and mainstream gaming.

Performanc­e

The Razer Blade Stealth 13 deploys an Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 Ti Max-Q and 4GB of memory. It’s the bare minimum I’d expect in a gaming laptop these days. It’s joined by an 11th-gen, quad-core Intel Core i7-1165G7, 16GB of dual-channel memory and a 512GB Samsung PM981 SSD that’s very quick.

The GTX 1650 Ti is reasonable for mainstream gaming. In Far Cry New Dawn it averaged 84fps at Medium settings, and it handled Wolfenstei­n at 55fps. When I turned the settings up to Ultra it played Far Cry and Wolfenstei­n at 38fps and 48fps, although in Far Cry the minimum dipped below 30fps.

Positively, the Razer is able to play most single-player games at good frame rates – you’ll only have to dial back the settings in the toughest titles, or if you want to get the frame rate closer to triple figures. This laptop will also handle any popular e-sports title at beyond 100fps.

Compared to other GPUs, though, the Razer’s graphics hardware is a little underpower­ed. The GTX 1650 Ti scored 19,857 in 3DMark Sky Diver, but the full-power laptop GTX 1660 Ti is almost 10,000 points faster – and the RTX 2060 found in the Acer Predator Helios 300 scores 34,000 points. You’ll see huge improvemen­ts from those alternativ­es – think 20fps gains or more.

The processor is fine but outpaced elsewhere, largely by AMD hardware. The Core i7-1165G7 scored 4,470 in Geekbench 5. The Ryzen 7 4800H is available in plenty of alternativ­es, including the Asus, and it scored more than 6,500 in Geekbench – and the Ryzen 9 4900H scores more than 7,000. If you want to stick with low-power parts, AMD’s Ryzen 7 4800U also outpaces the Intel CPU in scores of around 5,800.

Geekbench 5 (multi-core)

Razer Blade Stealth 13: 5,455

Alienware m17 R3: 7,976

Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo: 7,936

Gigabyte Aero 15 OLED XB: 7,445

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 6,022

Asus ROG Zephyrus G14: 7,693

3DMark Sky Diver

Razer Blade Stealth 13: 22,567

Alienware m17 R3: 48,054

Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo: 29,179

Gigabyte Aero 15 OLED XB: 37,665

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 36,003

Asus ROG Zephyrus G14: 33,007

Wolfenstei­n (Ultra 1080p)

Razer Blade Stealth 13: 38fps

Alienware m17 R3: 138fps

Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo: 122fps

Gigabyte Aero 15 OLED XB: 99fps

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 103fps

Wolfenstei­n (Medium 1080p)

Razer Blade Stealth 13: 55fps

Alienware m17 R3: 151fps

Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo: 133fps

Gigabyte Aero 15 OLED XB: 110fps

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 113fps

Far Cry New Dawn (Ultra 1080p)

Razer Blade Stealth 13: 48fps

Alienware m17 R3: 92fps

Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo: 84fps

Gigabyte Aero 15 OLED XB: 75fps

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 75fps

Far Cry New Dawn (Medium 1080p)

Razer Blade Stealth 13: 84fps

Alienware m17 R3: 109fps

Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo: 91fps

Gigabyte Aero 15 OLED XB: 83fps

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 85fps

Battery drain (120 nits, 30 minutes)

Razer Blade Stealth 13: 9 hours, 30 minutes

Alienware m17 R3: 2 hours, 18 minutes

Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo: 2 hours, 9 minutes

Gigabyte Aero 15 OLED XB: 7 hours, 5 minutes

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 4 hours, 50 minutes

Asus ROG Zephyrus G14: 11 hours, 33 minutes

Intel only has an advantage in single-threaded benchmarks and, even then, the margins are slim. Disappoint­ingly, the Razer’s Core i7 CPU is throttled in this slim machine – its Turbo peak is rated for 4.7GHz, but it ran at around 4GHz during easier tasks and around 2.5GHz in tougher benchmarks. Unfettered, the i7-1165G7 could score beyond 5,800 points in Geekbench, but that’s not possible here, and it still wouldn’t overhaul AMD’s silicon.

So, where does this leave the Razer in real-world terms? It’s no slouch – it’ll handle day-to-day computing, web browsing, Office applicatio­ns and photo editing, and it won’t bottleneck games. But if you want to handle tougher tasks, AMD is a better bet. And, bear in mind, that AMD’s faster Ryzen 5000-series laptop chips will launch in early 2021.

Razer’s Synapse software has a performanc­e mode that can eke more speed out of this machine. It improved the Sky Diver score to 22,567 points, but only delivered a couple of extra frames in games. Better gains came in Geekbench, where the Razer’s score jumped to 5,352. It doesn’t change the CPU hierarchy, but it does deliver extra pace.

Impressive­ly, the Razer doesn’t exhibit major heat or noise problems. During gaming, the fan noise is noticeable but modest – consistent­ly quieter than the Asus. On the outside, the underside gets warm but not uncomforta­ble. The downside, of course, is CPU throttling. Razer’s machine delivers mixed battery life. During gaming, it’s convention­al – I only got two hours from this notebook. During less-demanding tasks the Razer is better – it lasted for nine and a half hours during a 720p video playback test at 120 nits and just under eight hours when working.

VERDICT

The late 2020 edition of the Razer Blade Stealth 13 brings a huge amount of quality to the ultraporta­ble market.

It’s slim, light laptop that’s genuinely capable of gaming on the go – the GTX 1650 Ti isn’t hugely quick, but it’ll still handle single-player titles and any e-sports game. Elsewhere, this machine has fantastic physical design and great screen quality.

There are compromise­s throughout, though. The Razer only has good battery life when it’s not playing games, and its Intel CPU is fine – but beaten by AMD. The keyboard is too shallow, and physical connectivi­ty is underwhelm­ing. It’s also extremely expensive.

If you do want decent gaming power inside a high-quality chassis, then the Razer will be absolutely worth the money. But I think it’s just too expensive considerin­g the numerous compromise­s – and when compared to the rival Asus, which offers comparable gaming grunt and more CPU power inside a cheaper machine that’s barely any bigger. Mike Jennings

SPECIFICAT­IONS

• 13.3in (1,920x1,080) Full HD IPS Display

• Windows 10 Home

• 11th gen Intel Core i7-1165G7 quad-core processor

• 16GB dual-channel (fixed) RAM

• 512GB SSD

• 4 speakers and Smart Amp

• THX Spatial Audio

• 4-mic Array

• Headphone jack

• Intel Wireless-AX 201 (IEEE 802.11a/b/g/n/ac/ax)

• Bluetooth 5.1

• 304.6x210x15.3mm

• 1.41kg

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 ??  ?? As you can see, the Razer Blade Stealth 13 looks fantastic.
As you can see, the Razer Blade Stealth 13 looks fantastic.
 ??  ?? The keyboard’s buttons are crisp and consistent.
The keyboard’s buttons are crisp and consistent.
 ??  ?? The Blade’s display is great – smooth, accurate and bright.
The Blade’s display is great – smooth, accurate and bright.
 ??  ?? Razer’s Synapse software has a performanc­e mode that can eke more speed out of this machine.
Razer’s Synapse software has a performanc­e mode that can eke more speed out of this machine.

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