Gaming phones have a tragic history – the failure of Nokia’s N-Gage
and Sony Ericsson's Xperia Play is like an albatross around the neck of
each and every new game-centric phone. Is it time to put that past
failures to rest? It’s been 14 years since the first of those and nearly
7 since the Xperia now.
The Razer Phone
comes from a company best-known for its gaming hardware – computers,
laptops, accessories, if it has RGB lights, Razer sells it. And their
tagline is “For gamers. By gamers.”
Still, we think there’s more to this phone than games. The one
feature that is strictly gaming-related is the Ultramotion screen with
its 120Hz refresh rate. 120Hz and 144Hz are a big thing among twitch
gamers – FPS, sport and other games where you live or die on reaction
time.
That might be a bit close-minded, the iPad Pro has a 120Hz ProMotion
display and it’s not (only) for games. No, the faster reaction time of
the screen makes the Apple Pencil feel more like a lower case pencil.
The Snapdragon 835 chipset with 8GB of RAM is certainly a boon for
gaming, but also not uncommon among late 2017 flagships. The powerful
stereo speakers (THX certified) and large 4,000mAh battery are similarly
great for gaming, but watching a video or browsing the web are also
enhanced.
The all aluminum body and dual camera are wholly unrelated to gaming – they are just 2017 flagship features. You can check out camera samples from the camera, if you’re curious.
Keep in mind that the Razer Phone is a $700/€750/£700
phone. Compare that to a €800 Huawei Mate 10 Pro, a €830 or so Galaxy
Note8, €900 LG V30. The Razer is not cheap, but it undercuts other
flagships.
Are you getting one – for gaming or just for the reasonably-priced flagship specs?
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