Testseek.com have collected 85 expert reviews of the Razer Blade Pro 17 2017 - Intel Gen 7 and the average rating is 81%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Razer Blade Pro 17 2017 - Intel Gen 7.
June 2017
(81%)
85 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(62%)
230 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
81010085
The editors liked
As good a gaming-laptop keyboard as you'll find in the $2
000 range
With the added boon of its robust color-customization suite
If you like a trackpad aligned on the right side of your keyboard
This one's better than most in the gaming-laptop space
Ma
Nice all-metal design
120Hz panel
A ton of storage
Good battery life
Solid 1080p gaming performance
Sharp-looking 120Hz screen
Solid build quality
Quiet
Effective cooling
Excellent per-key RGB backlit keyboard
Long battery life
Stunning 4K touch display with Nvidia G-Sync
Remarkably powerful and impressively slim
Superb-feeling mechanical keyboard
Touch pad
Dedicated volume dial
Slim power adapter
Premium build quality
Beautiful 4K touch display
High-end gaming performance
The Razer Blade Pro puts Nvidia's top-performing graphics card in a slim laptop that can pass as a work or gaming system. The premium design
4K-resolution touchscreen and mechanical keyboard make it a pleasure to use
Thin
Sleek design given what's inside
Pretty quiet
Even when full on gaming
Great performance
Decent sound
Plenty of ports
USB Type-C Thunderbolt
Matte screen
Includes free FL Studio 12 music software
Plenty of storage with 256GB + 2TB hard driv
Extremely powerful and VR-ready
Beautiful 4Kdisplay
Fantastic low-profile mechanical keyboard
Mechanical keyboard with RGB backlighting
Optional CPU overclocking
Clean manufacturing
Very good color space coverage
Powerful hardware
Large touchpad
Slim build
Attractive design
Thin power supply
Thunderbolt 3
Classy case
32 GB RAM
PCIe SS
Relatively quiet fan noise during low loads
No tendency to pulsate
Attractive matte design
Very robust and dense build quality
No CPU or GPU throttling when gaming
Steady performance
Brighter display backlight than Blade Pro GTX 1080
Strong bar hi
The editors didn't like
In dropping to the $2
000 level
You give up the performance boosts needed to max out this 120Hz panel—especially since it doesn't use variable refresh rates to offset its frequent sub-120 performance
Enough bugs and crashes emerged to make us question t
Pricier than average for a GTX 1060
Relatively dull matte screen
Pricey for GTX 1060-level performance
No dedicated gaming macro keys
Lacks built-in biometric features
Fans get loud while gaming
No number pad due to touch-pad placement
No built-in biometrics
Lacks overclocking features
Loud fans
Minor audiovisual difference from non-THX version
Short battery life
The mechanical keyboard is clicky and loud
And the right-side trackpad placement remains a design misstep. The laptop and power supply get very hot
And the very loud fans start blowing as soon as you boot up a game
Not a fan of the keyboard/trackpad layout
Backlighting doesn't extend to extra markings on keys
Mediocre battery life
Too big for some backpacks
Very expensive
Irregular lighting along lower rim of display
Parts of palm rest heat to uncomfortable temperatures
GTX 1080 weaker than in other laptops
Razer Synapse makes registration compulsory
Very loud in 3D mode
Reflective display surface
Laptop could be li
Unimpressive black-white and gray-gray response times
Smaller battery capacity than Blade Pro GTX 1080 SKU
Published: 2016-12-19, Author: Sean , review by: engadget.com
Extremely powerful and VR-ready, Beautiful 4Kdisplay, Fantastic low-profile mechanical keyboard
Too big for some backpacks, Short battery life, Very expensive
The new Razer Blade Pro is unequivocally the most powerful laptop the company has ever built, and one of the first notebooks we've seen that can consistently play modern 4K games on high graphics settings. But that power comes at the cost of a high as...
Abstract: Lisa Gade reviews the new, more affordable version of Razer's biggest gaming laptop, the 17.3″ Razer Blade Pro. This model uses the same chassis and design, but has a full HD 1920 x 1080 matte non-touch display rather than 4K, and an NVIDIA GTX 1060 rathe...
Abstract: Lisa Gade reviews the Razer Blade Pro v2, a high end 17” gaming laptop that's clad in Razer's signature matte black aluminum. This is a slim though not terribly light laptop (7.7 lb. / 3.49kg) whose looks are subdued compared to most gaming rigs. The 22.5...
The Blade Pro is well designed, well built, and performs admirably at 1080P. However, it will cost you a pretty penny and put a dent in your bank account. The good news is that a notebook of this caliber is going to a last a long time before something lik...
Great performance, Awesome build quality and design
Might be too bulky for some, The best don't come cheap
The new Razer Blade Pro doesn't exactly to solve any of the underlying or enduring drawbacks to the gaming laptop experience, but that's not to say it can't find a way to thrive within those limitations...
The Razer Blade Pro isn't cheap, but it's an excellent Windows 10 laptop that can handle just about any task – for work or play. If you want an alternative to the MacBook Pro or Dell XPS 15, with larger (17.3in) screen and more graphical grunt, the Razer...
Abstract: Following its more mobile Blade and Blade Stealth laptops, Razer has introduced its top-of-the-line Blade Pro gaming-focused machine in Australia for the first time.With a 17.3-inch screen, a Core i7 Kaby Lake processor and a beautiful, comfortable design...
Published: 2017-11-14, Author: Matthew , review by: au.pcmag.com
Nice all-metal design, 120Hz panel, A ton of storage, Good battery life, Solid 1080p gaming performance
Pricier than average for a GTX 1060, Relatively dull matte screen
This less expensive take on the Blade Pro packs the premium build and many high-end features of its pricier sibling, but costs more than the average GTX 1060 gaming laptop...
Abstract: There are always going to be people who want a big, powerful laptop. I'm talking about people like developers that want to show off early game builds at trade shows or stubborn people who simply can't compromise on performance when they are away from home...
The Razer Blade Pro puts Nvidia's top-performing graphics card in a slim laptop that can pass as a work or gaming system. The premium design, 4K-resolution touchscreen and mechanical keyboard make it a pleasure to use
The mechanical keyboard is clicky and loud, and the right-side trackpad placement remains a design misstep. The laptop and power supply get very hot, and the very loud fans start blowing as soon as you boot up a game
Razer manages to fit a high-end graphics card into an amazingly thin laptop. Gamers and graphics pros alike will love the performance, but not the loud fans and misplaced touchpad...