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ComputingGamingRazerTech

New Razer Blade 18 rocks RTX 5090 and a dual-mode 240Hz/440Hz display

Razer Blade 18 (2025) brings RTX 50-series power and a world-first dual-mode display. Starts at $3,200—see why it’s a beast!

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Feb 26, 2025, 12:57 PM EST
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2025 Razer Blade 18
Image: Razer
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Hey, gamers and tech junkies, buckle up—Razer just dropped some serious news that’s got the gaming laptop world buzzing. The Razer Blade 18 is back with a 2025 refresh, and it’s packing a punch that’ll make your jaw drop, with cutting-edge Intel Core Ultra 200HX series processors, the shiny new NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50-series GPUs (yes, up to the beastly RTX 5090), and an 18-inch display that’s being called a world-first for its dual-mode wizardry. If you’ve been itching for a portable rig that rivals a desktop in power and swagger, this might just be your dream machine.

First things first, let’s talk about that screen. Razer’s touting the Blade 18’s display as “the world’s first 18-inch dual-mode display,” and it’s not just marketing fluff. This thing is massive—18 inches of pure visual glory—and it’s got a trick up its sleeve. You can flip between two modes on the fly: UHD+ (that’s 3840 x 2400) at 240Hz for when you want to soak in every pixel of a lush open-world title like Cyberpunk 2077, or FHD+ (1920 x 1200) at a blistering 440Hz for when you need silky-smooth speed in fast-paced shooters like Valorant. It’s like having two laptops in one—one for eye candy, one for raw performance.

According to Razer’s own spiel, this dual-mode setup is a game-changer for anyone who hates compromising. This kind of flexibility is rare in laptops, giving users the best of both worlds without needing to lug around an external monitor. The display’s Calman-verified too, with 100% DCI-P3 color coverage, so creators can trust it for editing gigs as much as gamers can for immersive play. Oh, and it’s got a 3ms response time, because ghosting is so 2010.

Under the hood, the Blade 18 is a beast. It’s rocking Intel’s latest Core Ultra 9 275HX processor—24 cores, 24 threads, and a boost clock up to 5.4GHz. That’s desktop-grade power squeezed into a chassis that’s just 0.86 inches thick at its slimmest point. Pair that with NVIDIA’s RTX 50-series GPUs—options include the RTX 5070 Ti, RTX 5080, or the top-dog RTX 5090 with up to 175W of graphics power—and you’ve got a rig that laughs at max settings. The RTX 5090, built on NVIDIA’s Blackwell architecture, brings goodies like DLSS 4, which promises AI-powered upscaling that could make even the most demanding titles run like butter.

Razer’s somehow managed to cram 280W of total package power into this thing, which is wild for something you can still toss in a backpack. To keep it from turning into a portable furnace, they’ve overhauled the cooling with a massive three-fan vapor chamber system and what they claim are the “thinnest exhaust fins in its class.”

Razer didn’t stop at the guts—they’ve given the Blade 18’s keyboard a glow-up too. The new scissor-switch design bumps key travel up by 35% compared to the last Blade 18, hitting a satisfying 63g actuation force. Translation? It’s got a deeper, snappier feel that’s less mushy than before. They’ve also thrown in a 10-key numeric keypad (finally!) and dual-LED backlighting per key with Razer Chroma RGB, so you can make it glow like a neon rave.

2025 Razer Blade 18 RGB keyboard.
Image: Razer

Razer’s promising “desktop levels of connectivity,” and they’re not kidding. The Blade 18 comes loaded with two Thunderbolt ports—one Thunderbolt 5, one Thunderbolt 4—plus three USB-A ports, HDMI 2.1, a 2.5Gb Ethernet jack, and a UHS-II SD card reader. Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4 round out the wireless game. Whether you’re plugging in an external GPU, an 8K monitor, or a full suite of peripherals, this thing’s got you covered.

  • 2025 Razer Blade 18 left side ports.
  • 2025 Razer Blade 18 right side ports.

And for the cherry on top? A six-speaker setup with THX Spatial Audio for virtual surround sound—perfect for getting lost in Hogwarts Legacy—and a 5MP webcam with a privacy shutter for those inevitable Zoom calls. It’s clear Razer’s aiming to make this a do-it-all machine.

Alright, let’s rip the Band-Aid off: this isn’t cheap. Preorders are live, and the Blade 18 starts at $3,199.99 with an RTX 5070 Ti, 32GB of RAM, and a 1TB SSD. Want the full monty with the RTX 5090, 64GB of RAM, and 4TB of storage? That’ll set you back $4,899.99. Ouch. For reference, last year’s Blade 18 with an RTX 4090 topped out around $4,500, so the price creep isn’t shocking, but it’s still a gut punch.

If that’s too rich for your blood, Razer’s also opened pre-orders for the Blade 16, which starts at $2,799.99. It’s thinner (0.59 inches!), rocks an AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 processor, and can go up to an RTX 5090 too, though with a slightly lower 160W power cap. Both laptops ship in late April, and preordering through Razer.com nets you a bonus: a free X-Ray skin and laptop stand for the Blade 18, or a skin and USB-C dock for the Blade 16.

The Razer Blade 18 (2025) is a monster in all the right ways—powerful, versatile, and dripping with premium vibes. That dual-mode display is a standout, the RTX 50-series GPUs are drool-worthy, and the redesigned keyboard might just make you forget you’re not on a mechanical deck. But at $3,200 to nearly $5,000, it’s a luxury buy for deep-pocketed enthusiasts or pros who need the best. If you’re in that camp, preorder now and snag those freebies. If not, maybe keep an eye on the Blade 16—or wait for a sale. Either way, Razer’s raised the bar, and the gaming laptop scene just got a whole lot spicier.


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