Quote from: Adityarathee on April 03, 2021, 12:46:01
Are razer laptops reliable .. i am asking cos i am from india and wanna buy a decent gaming laptop that is not quiet heavy ... and razer has no official stores and service centres in india yet so if i ask my cousin to buy a razer laptop from usa will it run without issues for at least 6-7 years ?
I'm from India and I bought a Blade 15 (Advanced, 8750H/2070MQ). It' s two years in, no component failure, no battery issues (and the battery still lasts 5.5 hours on a charge). Use Throttlestop and keep the turbo off on battery and you'll be gucci. I also keep it overclocked in Afterburner during games to get 2070 Super Max-Q class performance (~7500 in Time Spy Graphics).
Most people here spend way too much time on Reddit and forming opinions rather than owning laptops - coming from an engineering college in India (in a fairly isolated place), literally no one in my hostel ever had laptop problems for which they needed technical support/sending in a laptop for repairs to a service centre - unless they dropped their laptops. Also Idk if most people buying Razer laptops are RGB-crazed teenagers who don't know how to treat expensive gadgets properly and start complaining at the first sign of trouble, but I think it holds true for most laptops that if you want to find issues and bad reviews, you'll find them online with pretty much every laptop - even the go-to professional favorite the XPS 15.
Ignore Dorby if you don't foresee yourself physically damaging the laptop. Keep it clean, open it up from time to time, clean the fans and change thermal paste. Do the needful and you'll be fine. It's expensive but the aluminium unibody is the best in the business (apart from the Macbook Pro's and the Surface Book 15). If you're paranoid, go for a Dell/HP/Lenovo since they have service centres in India.
Just note - Razer uses slightly lower quality batteries than Dell and Apple, so try not keeping your laptop permanently plugged into a wall (that's not what a thin and light is meant for, anyway). Also, reconsider if chassis build quality isn't important for you - you'll get better performance from a cheaper or thicker laptop.
Also in case Dorby replies to this with the old Linus Tech review of the Blade 14's he bought for himself and his employees and the issues they faced - it's an old design, it was the only laptop with those level of components in a 14" formfactor at the time, and the company was also much younger as well. Not a great example. He himself keeps switching between the XPS 13 and Blade Stealth 13 as his personal favorites.
Ted talk over.