Razer is giving its Blade 16 gaming laptop a speed and battery boost for 2026. The high-end gaming laptop keeps the same thin chassis and RTX 50-series GPU options as last year’s model, but it’s now making the switch from AMD to an Intel Core Ultra 9 386H “Panther Lake” chip, and corresponding faster RAM. The new Blade 16 is available now directly from Razer, starting at $3,499.99 with an RTX 5080 GPU, 32GB of RAM, and 1TB SSD. The top-end RTX 5090 model gets 2TB of storage and costs $4,499.99. According to Razer’s specs sheet, a cheaper Blade 16 with RTX 5070 Ti will be priced and released at a later time.
Razer claims its new laptop is up to 60 percent more power efficient while sporting 33 percent more processing cores (its Intel chip is 16-core instead of last year’s 12-core AMD). But Razer also put in LPDDR5X-9600MHz RAM for an outright speed boost over the 2025 model’s 8000MHz memory. The claimed “fastest available memory” is of course soldered into the board just like the 2025 model.
Other upgrades for the 2026 Blade include high-speed Thunderbolt 5 for one of its two USB-C ports (the second is Thunderbolt 4), an updated six-speaker audio setup, Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 6 support, and a slight brightness increase for its OLED panel (500 nits instead of 400 nits in SDR mode).
I really liked the Blade 16 when I reviewed the 5090 model last year. The Blades are very pricey, and the 5090 isn’t really worth the extra money over a 5080 model, but they’re some of the thinnest and sleekest options for a MacBook Pro-esque experience with a focus on gaming. Considering how impressive I found Intel’s Panther Lake chip for both performance and efficiency, I’m intrigued to see what that means for the Blade — especially when the more modestly priced 5070 Ti option comes around.


