Razer has quietly re-entered the external GPU (eGPU) market after a six‑year absence, unveiling the Core X V2—a $349.99 enclosure that pairs only with a single Thunderbolt 5 cable and little else in the box. As gaming laptops and handheld PCs stretch for ever‑greater graphical prowess, the promise of plugging in desktop‑class GPUs remains tantalizing. Yet with the Core X V2, you’ll find yourself chasing down more parts—and spending more cash—before you can bask in its promised boost.
Razer’s last foray, the Core X Chroma, supported Thunderbolt 3 and boasted a pre‑installed power supply, USB ports, and Ethernet jacks when it launched six years ago. Back then, eGPUs were more experimental—niche setups for workstation users and early adopters. Fast‑forward to 2025, and Thunderbolt 5 has arrived, promising up to 80Gbps bandwidth and smarter power delivery. But hopes of plug‑and‑play simplicity have been tempered by Razer’s streamlined approach with the Core X V2—leave your expectations of all‑in‑one convenience at the door.
At its heart, the Core X V2 is about one thing: Thunderbolt 5. That single cable handles up to 140W of power delivery for your laptop or handheld, while shuffling data at theoretical speeds of 80Gbps for graphics bandwidth—double what Thunderbolt 4 can muster. Under the hood, the enclosure accommodates full‑length, four‑slot AMD and NVIDIA cards, giving you room for everything from an RX 7900 XT to an RTX 4090 Laptop GPU. Backwards compatibility with Thunderbolt 4 means you won’t be left stranded if your notebook isn’t the bleeding edge—though you’ll pay the price in throttled performance.

The Core X V2’s chassis is a no‑frills affair: a ventilated steel shell, a single 120mm fan that adjusts speed based on thermal load, and a mesh side panel for airflow. You’ll find no built‑in power supply, no USB hub, and no Ethernet port. Razer argues this modularity offers “maximum flexibility” for high‑wattage cards—after all, some of the latest GPUs demand 600W or more. But for many users craving simplicity, it shifts the burden back onto your shopping list.
With the power supply ejected from the box, you’ll need to secure a standard ATX unit rated to meet both the enclosure’s 230W draw and whatever your chosen GPU requires—think 750W for an RTX 4080 or more for top‑tier cards. Don’t forget the GPU itself: desktop‑class graphics cards can easily top $1,000 once you aim for the upper echelons of performance. Suddenly your entry‑level $350 chassis looks more like a starting point for a $1,500 investment.
To make matters trickier, Razer stripped out the USB and Ethernet passthrough that once made Core enclosures into docking stations. If you still need ports for keyboards, mice, or wired networking, you’ll have to spring for Razer’s new Thunderbolt 5 Dock—another $390 spend that reconnects the dots, but only after you’ve laid down more cash on top of the Core X V2 itself.
Razer’s online storefront lists the Core X V2 at US $349.99, with a “Notify Me” button in lieu of an actual buy link. The Thunderbolt 5 Dock, meanwhile, is already up for pre‑order at $399.99 in Chroma and $389.99 in Mercury White. Razer hasn’t pegged a firm ship date for the Core X V2 beyond “coming soon,” so eager adopters will have to wait for that download icon to turn into a “Buy Now” button.
For the ultra‑portable laptop jockey or handheld PC enthusiast, the Core X V2 holds genuine appeal: desktop‑class rendering on demand, future‑proofed bandwidth, and room for the biggest cards on the market. But if you hoped for a turnkey solution—just plug in your GPU, dock your peripherals, and go—you’re back to juggling components and power budgets. In 2025’s fast‑moving tech landscape, that might be a compromise some are willing to make for the thrill of externalized horsepower. Yet for everyone else, Razer’s stripped‑down strategy could feel like paying a premium to do more of your own legwork.
In the end, the Core X V2 is less a complete package and more an invitation to build your own eGPU ecosystem—one Thunderbolt 5 cable at a time. Whether that’s empowering or frustrating depends entirely on how much you relish the hunt for parts versus the excitement of the graphical gains they’ll ultimately deliver.
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