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The Blade 15 Advanced can be configured with an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060, RTX 2070 Max-Q Design, or RTX 2080 Max-Q design for the GPU. Some of the lower versions of the Advanced model ship with an 8th Gen Intel i7, while the more expensive ones have the latest 9th Gen chip. You shouldn't focuse on this too much, though, as the difference is minimal in real-world usage.
For displays, there are choices for matte full HD at 144Hz, matte full HD at 240 Hz (new), glossy 4K touch, or a glossy 4K OLED with touch (new). There is an even a choice between Razer's traditional black color scheme or the newer, more professional Mercury White. But if you want the latter, you are limited either to the 144Hz or 240 Hz display options and cannot get the 4K OLED, which is only in black and with a GeForce RTX 2080 video card.
Ports remain mostly unchanged, with three USB Gen 2 Type-A, Thunderbolt 3 Type-C, HDMI 2.0B, and Mini DisplayPort. There is no SD card slot. And while the Blade 15 Base has a full Ethernet port, the thinner Blade 15 Advanced does not.
Other new additions for 2019 include Intel Wireless AX200, Bluetooth 5, Windows Hello IR camera, 2,667 MHz DDR4 RAM, and a modest 80WHr battery.
For design, Razer finally settled on one aesthetic for all its laptops. The Blade 15 Advanced is perfectly symmetrical, with a solid, metal chassis, and squared edges. If you opt for the white chassis, you lose the glowing snake logo, which is a blessing for some (the black versions can be disabled, though). Between the hinge, display bezels, and overall look, Razer easily makes the best-looking gamer laptops around.
The Blade 15's weight hovers between 4.73 lbs. and 4.87 lbs. (2.15 kg to 2.21 kg) depending on configuration, making this one of the heavier 15-inch gaming laptops. But you can chalk that heftiness up to the premium metal chassis – this thing is built like a tank.
In my recent review of the Blade Stealth, I was surprised by just how much I enjoyed using it, despite the run-of-the-mill Ultrabooks specificationas. I don't quite feel as strongly about the Blade 15 Advanced. More specifically, I don't love the keyboard and trackpad.
In photos, the look and layout of the Blade 15's keyboard is nearly perfect. Even the per-key RGB Chroma now lights up the function keys – an infamous oversight on previous Blades. But in typing, the keyboard is lacking. Travel is shallow, and it just doesn't have the spring-back I want. You would think that Razer would make the Blade Stealth's keyboard bigger for the Blade 15, but that's not the case. In using the Blade 15, I yearned for the SteelSeries keyboards that MSI laptops use, which set the benchmark for both gamers and touch-typists.
To a lesser extent, the same goes for the trackpad. It's massive, smooth, and uses Precision drivers – all good things. But the clickiness feels slightly softer compared to the more satisfying Blade Stealth.
The quad, top-firing speakers are on the high-end – especially for gaming laptops, which frequently lack good speakers due to the "gamers just headphones" excuse. Dolby Atmos software is also a nice touch.
I don't want to dwell too much on the battery life of the Blade 15 Advanced. For one, it's primarily a gaming laptop with a decently sized 80WHr battery (quite a bit smaller than the Dell XPS 15's 97WHr). The battery life also depends on GPU choice, whether you're actively using that GPU, and if you opt for full HD or one of the 4K panels. Our review unit with an RTX 2070 and full HD 240Hz display was able to get between five and six hours of regular, non-gaming usage. That battery life falls short of productivity Ultrabooks, but it is not bad either for this class of PC.

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