Testseek.fr ont rassemblé 85 examens experts du Razer Blade Pro 17 2017 - Intel Gen 7 et l'estimation moyenne est 81%. Faites descendre l'écran et voyez les toutes les revues pour Razer Blade Pro 17 2017 - Intel Gen 7.
June 2017
(81%)
85 Avis
Note moyenne issue des avis d’experts sur ce produit.
Utilisateurs
(62%)
230 Avis
Note moyenne délivrée par les utilisateurs du produit.
81010085
Les éditeurs ont aimé
Son écran 120 Hz mais
La puissance de l'engin
Discret quand il est peu sollicité
Son design
Très compact au vu des caractéristiques
Châssis au top
Performant
Système de refroidissement efficace
Dalle 120 Hz
Design sobre
Chargeur compact
Excellent écran
Excellentes performances
La molette de volume
Razer Chroma
Super design
Une configuration monstrueuse
Une finition exemplaire
Un écran tip top tactile et en 4K
Le touchpad sur la droite
Une bonne idée (sauf pour les gauchers)
Un son très correct avec le THX et le Dolby Digital
Clavier mécanique avec rétroéclairage RGB
Overclocking du CPU en option
Bonne qualité de fabrication
Très bonne couverture de l'espace colorimétrique
équipement puissant
Large touchpad
Fin
Design réussi
Adaptateur secteur fin
Thunderbolt 3
Châ
Bruit des ventilateurs relativement faible en cas de sollicitations limitées
Pas de tendance à vibrer
Design mat réussi
Robuste
Pas de baisse de fréquence CPU ou GPU en jeu
Performances solides
écran plus lumineux que le Blade Pro GTX 1080
Charni
Les éditeurs n'ont pas aimé
… l'absence de G-Sync
Le prix
Bruyant dans les jeux
Autonomie
Trop sensible aux traces de doigts
Bordures d'écran (trop) larges
Impossible de gérer la vitesse des ventilateurs
Absence de pavé numérique
Tarif élevé
Le pad à droite
Bruyant sous charge lourde
Les touches secondaires
Son moyen (version 1080p)
Ça chauffe beaucoup. Énormément
Et du coup
ça ventile beaucoup
Et ça fait un paquet de bruit
éclairage irrégulier le long de la bordure inférieure de l'écran
Certaines parties des reposepoignets chauffe trop
GTX 1080 moins puissante que dans d'autres portables
Razer Synapse rend l'enregistrement obligatoire
Très bruyant en mode 3D
écran su
Temps de réponse du noir au blanc et du gris au gris très moyens
Plus petite batterie que sur le Blade Pro GTX 1080
The Razer Blade Pro impresses in many key departments. It looks fantastic, and will easily blend in at LAN parties or the office. It's slim, has great build quality, and the screen has great contrast and solid colours.The revised keyboard and trackpad des...
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Publié: 2018-01-24, Auteur: Mike , review by: itpro.co.uk
Great design and build quality, Powerful, wellbalanced components, Revised keyboard and trackpad work well, Good screen quality
Battery life is poor, Screen can't quite match MacBook, Storage is slower than Apple
The Razer Blade Pro is a large and slim laptop that does a good job at delivering for work and play. The components have ample power for most tasks, and the screen offers solid quality and great contrast. The MacBook is still our favourite, but the Bla...
Sleek for a 17in gaming laptop, Solid gaming potential at 1080p/120Hz, Good range of connectivity options, Comfortable RGB keyboard, Excellent stereo speakers
Pricey for a GTX 1060 laptop, Trackpad takes getting used to
Razer has extended the reach of its 17.3in Razer Blade Pro laptop with the addition of a second, more affordable model dubbed the Blade Pro Full HD.Geared for gaming first and foremost, the key point of differentiation is the change from a 4K IGZO pan...
If you want to kick desktop gaming to the curb without sacrificing performance, the Razer Blade Pro is your best option. It's big, powerful, and expensive, but it's also a real monster of a gaming rig...
Extrait: Razer's big 17-inch Blade Pro is one of the slimmest big-screen gaming laptops you can buy, but it's also one of the most expensive, starting at $3,999 in the US (or £3,799 and AU$5,899).Now Razer has a new version of the system, with a more budget-friend...
Nice build quality, Beautiful Screen, Great performance for such a thin laptop, Speakers sound great, Excellent trackpad
keyboard is a major disappointment for many reasons, Trackpad in a bad spot for lefties, Gets extremely hot in both normal use and under heavy load, CPU throttles when overclocked, GPU is throttled compared to a normal GTX 1080, extremely expensive, Gsync
The Razer Blade Pro is definitely a mixed bag for me. There are some things I really like about it, such as the screen, build quality, trackpad and design. And those speakers sure sound great! But even some of those nice things have a couple tid-bits I do...
The Razer Blade Pro puts Nvidia's top-performing graphics card in a slim laptop that can pass as a work or gaming system. The premium design, 4K-resolution touchscreen and mechanical keyboard make it a pleasure to use
The mechanical keyboard is clicky and loud, and the right-side trackpad placement remains a design misstep. The laptop and power supply get very hot, and the very loud fans start blowing as soon as you boot up a game
Razer manages to fit a high-end graphics card into an amazingly thin laptop. Gamers and graphics pros alike will love the performance, but not the loud fans and misplaced touchpad...
Extrait: Nowadays, there's a fierce debate among players between consoles and gaming rigs. Which one truly offers a superior experience? While the answer to that question – if the price tag isn't a factor – is clear, what happens when you do factor it in? Can a ga...
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(75%)
Publié: 2018-03-11, Auteur: Sam , review by: arstechnica.com
As good a gaming-laptop keyboard as you'll find in the $2,000 range, with the added boon of its robust color-customization suite, If you like a trackpad aligned on the right side of your keyboard, this one's better than most in the gaming-laptop space, Ma
In dropping to the $2,000 level, you give up the performance boosts needed to max out this 120Hz panel—especially since it doesn't use variable refresh rates to offset its frequent sub-120 performance, Enough bugs and crashes emerged to make us question t
How reliable, though?Blade Pro FHD and Alienware's 13 R3 have nearly identical specs, except for the R3 having slightly faster RAM. As such, most benchmarks for those two are within a margin of error of each other, with the R3 pulling out more frequently...