![]() The Razer Blade is like a concealed weapon - small and unassuming, but with the capacity to cause lots of damage. Trading gunfire with random cops and gang members was punchy, but the music still lacked the oomph I would have expected. As I played GTA V, the dialogue was on point. Once again, the Blade put its best foot forward during gaming. The highs weren't that much better, leaving Beyonce's powerhouse soprano sounding flat and uninviting during "Love on Top." The Mellotron keyboard on "Summer Madness" was grating at high volume, while the guitars on Van Halen's "Hot for Teacher" sounded a bit strained. Despite the Dolby Digital Plus software, the Blade struggled to replicate the bass on Jay Z's "No Church in the Wild" and Kool and the Gang's "Summer Madness," which resulted in compressed-sounding lows. However, the machine's top-mounted speakers didn't produce the most precise audio I've heard. The Blade easily filled our medium-size lab with sound. The 10-finger capacitive display was agile and responsive to my touches, pinch-zooming and highlighting items accurately. When measured for brightness, the Blade's display scored a dazzling 337 nits, destroying the 231-nit thin-and-light average. On the Delta-E test (color accuracy), the Blade registered 1.2 (scores between 1 and 0 are ideal). The Aorus X3 Plus notched a slightly higher 106.3 percent. The Blade can reproduce 101.8 percent of the sRGB color gamut, which is slightly higher than the 100 percent we look for.
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