Razer has been always active through the years, busy with bringing innovation in computing, particularly in gaming. The year 2017 is looking better with another breakthrough in laptop gaming as Razer will soon unleash its laptop that has gaming desktop-level hardware and three monitors built in with their upcoming project dubbed as "Project Valerie."
As recently reported by Tech Radar, the upcoming CES 2017 is looking big for Razer as one of the company's big project have been revealed, though still under the code name "Project Valerie." The laptop is still as expected with its industry-leading hardware specs powerered by NVIDIA GTX 1080 GPU.
However, Razer haven't provided the complete run down of the specs yet and surprisingly, the processor to be included is still under wraps. Nevertheless, the folks at Tech Radar didn't just see the laptop, but also had the chance to try out a couple of supported games.
It surprised them when a graphically demanding game like "Battlefield 1" run on a single mobile GTX 1080 chip on Ultra settings. It happened to be an experience with minimal frame rate hiccups.
For those who are skeptical with the specs, Digital Trends have a rough basis that "Project Valerie" is running under the same architecture with the Razer Blade Pro. This could mean that it would also be run by an Intel Core i7-7700HQ processor.
However, as expected with a number of initial review sites, Razer's upcoming laptop still have some shortcomings. The setup appears to be space-hogging for a normal laptop. Even if this is of little relevance with the entire gaming experience, the portability of the standard laptops can't be expected to be the same with Razer's newest concept. That is, after going past the fact that it would also be roughly twice as expensive.
Still, the "Project Valerie" have started becoming one of the most anticipated concept in the portable gaming industry. Razer is known for innovation, albeit overly expensive products compared to other brands with practically the same processing power.
This article is copyrighted by Travelers Today, the travel news leader