Razer unveiled its updated Blade 16 gaming laptop on Wednesday, featuring Intel's Core Ultra 9 386H processor from the Panther Lake series and Nvidia GeForce RTX 50-series graphics. The laptop supports up to 64GB of high-speed LPDDR5 RAM and a brighter 16-inch OLED display. Pricing starts at $3,500 for the base model.
Razer launched the 2026 Blade 16 gaming laptop on March 25, switching from AMD processors to Intel's new Core Ultra 9 386H, a 16-core CPU built on the 18A process. This Panther Lake chip includes a neural processing unit delivering up to 50 trillion operations per second (TOPS) for AI tasks, qualifying the laptop as a Copilot+ PC, with an additional 40 TOPS from the integrated GPU. Razer claims up to 15 hours of battery life for video playback and 13 hours for productivity, thanks to the processor's efficiency. Graphics options include Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 or RTX 5090 Laptop GPUs, paired with up to 64GB of soldered 9,600MHz LPDDR5 RAM and 1TB or 2TB SSD storage, expandable via a second M.2 slot. The 16-inch OLED display offers 2,560x1,600 resolution at 240Hz, now reaching 1,100 nits peak brightness in HDR mode—100 nits brighter than the previous model—and covers 100% of the DCI-P3 color gamut with Calman verification. Design remains slim at 0.59 inches thick, crafted from a single block of T6-grade aluminum with a matte black, fingerprint-resistant finish and per-key RGB keyboard lighting. Connectivity includes a Thunderbolt 5 port, Thunderbolt 4, USB-A, HDMI 2.1, Wi-Fi 7, and Bluetooth 6. The base configuration with RTX 5080, 32GB RAM, and 1TB SSD starts at $3,500, while the top model with RTX 5090, 64GB RAM, and 2TB SSD costs $4,500. Razer cited global RAM shortages as a factor in the higher pricing. The laptop is available now through Razer's website.