Speakers

The Razer has two front facing stereo speakers. With laptops this thin, there generally is not a lot of room for good sounding speakers, but I am ready to be surprised at any time. As for overall volume, the new Razer Blade comes in at 83 dBA. The 2014 Razer Blade did not impress me with its speaker quaility, which was disappointing due to not only the cost of the device, but the front facing speakers, which should have an advantage over any system which fires the speakers down, were very poor. With laptops getting as thin and small as they are now, forward facing speakers are less common, so I was looking for more on the 2014 model.

The frequency response for the 2015 Razer Blade is very much improved over the last model. The 2014 model had a very poor curve, and almost no sound at all under 200 Hz. As soon as the first frequency was tested it was obvious that some changes have been made to the speakers. I reached out to Razer, and asked them about the speakers. Although the actual speakers are the same, various subsystems have been changed. Some tuning has certainly been done to improve the overall sound quality, and it has made a big difference. When gaming, headphones will still be necessary to get rid of the fan noise, but for watching movies or listening to music, the speakers are much more usable now.

Software

The only software installed on the system, is Razer’s Synapse software. This in and of itself is worth mentioning due to the huge amount of extra software normally installed on new PCs. On a premium device such as this, it is nice to see that there are no bundled extras to increase Razer's margins. The Synapse software is their in-house software to control the Blade and other Razer peripherals. Razer Synapse has continued to evolve since we last took a look at it. We will not go over what has not changed, so if you want to check that out, it is detailed on our last review here. What is new is a new Stats option on the Synapse software. Opening this goes to some interesting software which lets you keep track of what you are doing while gaming.

Stats, once enabled, will keep track of total keystrokes, distance, profile switches, and macro use, to let you know just what it is you are doing in the heat of battle. And speaking of heat, moving over to the Heatmaps section displays some very cool graphics of where your mouse clicks occur on the screen, where you tend to move your mouse to, and what keys you use the most while gaming. Some of us are certainly not good enough gamers to gain any sort of insight with this data, but it is interesting to look at. For those that want the extra edge, it is a nice addition to the software.

This is what is new on the software, but no software is perfect, nor is any hardware. In future versions of the Synapse software, it would be nice to see some extra features that are missing from the Razer Blade.

First, and previously mentioned, is the lack of any sort of customization of the lighting scheme for the Razer Blade. The green is nice, but there are those of us who like to really make it our own. Alienware has done this for years, and Razer now has some nice looking RGB keyboards which offer some great customization and effects.

The other addition to the software is likely more functional. Fan control should be part of the Synapse software suite on laptops. As much as we like how silent the Razer Blade is doing light duty tasks, almost nothing is more annoying to some people than a fan that ramps up and down, rather than just stay constant. A nice addition would be multiple fan settings, which could be automatically enabled when the GPU kicks in. As we saw in the GPU load graph, there was no throttling at all on the GPU, but the temperature would go up and down like a saw blade. Give me an option to just leave the fans on maximum in that scenario.

Battery Life, Temperatures, and Noise Final Words
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  • Oxford_Guy - Thursday, February 12, 2015 - link

    Do mean the weight compared to the 15" rMBP or to last years Razer Blade?
  • douglord - Thursday, February 12, 2015 - link

    Can you game on a Mac?
  • tipoo - Thursday, February 12, 2015 - link

    Yes, and especially under Windows. The Iris Pro 5200 isn't surer great, but it manages 1440x900 on low-med in most games out this year.
  • Jaisah - Thursday, September 3, 2015 - link

    I have the 2015 MacBook Pro 15" with the M370X and you certainly can game on a mac ;). I only game casually so I haven't tried all the latest and greatest games but I can play Elder Scrolls Online with everything turned up to full (except some lighting effects and shadows on medium) with 1440x900 resolution and I get 50-60 FPS with the occasional drop to 40 FPS. I installed some older games too like COD:MW2 and you can easily max out the settings. Probably with some of the newer, more demanding games you would have to turn the settings down to medium at 1440x900 but its still a very playable/enjoyable gaming experience. All games I've played have been in Mac OS X Yosemite. Aparently when El Capitan comes out with "Metal" we will see an immediate improvement in games. I'm excited :D
  • lurwas - Saturday, February 14, 2015 - link

    If you are after better key travel, have a look at MSI GS60 or GS70.
    + better performance then rMBP.
    + better keyboard (one of the best laptop keyboards that I ever typed on) with more travel
    +- depending on your preferences, available with matte option
    - battery life (4-5 hours when surfing)
  • cc2096 - Saturday, February 14, 2015 - link

    Please tell me where you got the 4-5 hours battery life with the MSI GS60? I've owned four of them across the model lineup and none pulled in better than 3 hours tops.
  • tipoo - Wednesday, February 11, 2015 - link

    Is that mid 2014 MBP the 750M or the Iris Pro 5200?
  • dmunsie - Wednesday, February 11, 2015 - link

    One would hope that they would pick the one with the 750M since it's closer in price and specs to the one being reviewed, but that's not exactly clear here.

    I don't have any high hopes that any impending rMBP update will make it better for gaming. It seems like the 750M is as good as it gets on the Apple side for now. Which is a shame because I almost always avoid playing any games on the built in retina display since the extra pixels end up taking a huge hit on the frame rates.
  • dovah-chan - Wednesday, February 11, 2015 - link

    holy crap sensible people talking about macs and pcs and they don't want to bash each others faces in. I love this site ;-; fak toms hardware forever 0/10 never going back
  • Oxford_Guy - Thursday, February 12, 2015 - link

    Indeed, I have both Macs and PCs and can see the pros and cons of each. I'd love a more powerful GPU in the rMBP, but can't see it happening, maybe an 850M at best (an 860M or even a 965M would be much more interesting...)

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