Razer's beefy Blade 15 Studio Edition now available starting at $4,000
By Dan Thorp-Lancaster published
With incredibly powerful specs, the Blade 15 Studio edition is ready for content creators.

What you need to know
- The Razer Blade 15 Studio Edition is now available.
- Built for content creators, the Blade 15 Studio Edition packs an NVIDIA Quadro RTX 5000, 32GB of RAM, and a 4K OLED display.
- You can order the Blade 15 Studio Edition for $4,000 at Razer (opens in new tab) now.
Razer is jumping on board NVIDIA's RTX Studio program today with the launch of the Blade 15 Studio Edition. The laptop caters to content creators by packing a ton of powerful hardware inside of the Blade 15, resulting in a PC that can handle multitasking with resource-heavy tasks ranging from video rendering to 3D model creation and beyond.
The Blade 15 Studio Edition comes with an Intel Core i7-9750 processor, up to 64GB of RAM, and up to 2TB of storage. Where the laptop stands out is with the inclusion of NVIDIA Quadro RTX 5000 Studio Edition graphics, which are backed up by 16GB of GDDR6 VRAM. There's also a 15.6-inch 4K OLED display, which should make content stand out with inky blacks and poppy colors.
Elsewhere, you'll get what is basically a standard Blade 15. That includes per-key RGB Razer Chroma lighting, Windows Hello support with an IR webcam, along with a bevy of ports that include Thunderbolt 3 among them.
For all of that power, you'll have to pay a pretty penny, however. The Razer Blade 15 Studio Edition starts at $4,000 and is available in Razer's Mercury White finish.
Razer Blade 15 Studio Edition
The Razer Blade 15 Studio Edition is built with content creators in mind with NVIDIA Quadro RTX 5000 graphics, tons of RAM and storage, and a poppy 4K OLED display.
Dan Thorp-Lancaster is the Editor in Chief for Windows Central. He began working with Windows Central as a news writer in 2014 and is obsessed with tech of all sorts. You can follow Dan on Twitter @DthorpL and Instagram @heyitsdtl. Got a hot tip? Send it to daniel.thorp-lancaster@futurenet.com.
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Was hoping they'd put the 8 core i9 in the studio. Seems they're saving that for the 17 in.
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Likely due to thermal throttling with the i9 in thin chassis like this one, on top of the other powerful hardware on display here.
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