Razer’s latest Blade 18 laptop may look the same, but its updated internals make it about as powerful as you can get in 2026. This year’s model adds the Intel Core Ultra 9 290HX Plus (24 cores, 5.5GHz boost) as a top-tier processor option. However, to say its pricing isn’t for the faint of heart would be an understatement. You’re looking at an ungodly $7,000 for the top-tier model. (Cue spit take.)
RAM starts at 32GB in the base model, which “only” costs $4,000. As you might expect, prices rise dramatically as you add more. You’re looking at an extra $600 to jump to 64GB of memory, and another $1,000 to go from 64GB to 128GB. Be sure to thank your local AI data center for that.
Graphics options are unchanged from the 2025 model. You’re looking at the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti in the base model, or the RTX 5090 on the high end. Razer’s dual-mode display is back: It lets you switch between UHD+ at 240Hz and FHD+ at 440Hz. However, Razer says the screen in this year’s upgrade gets 20 percent brighter.
Still a heavy battery hog
The machine is clearly a beast, but don’t expect its tradeoffs to change. The Blade 18 still weighs around 7 pounds, or the same as two 14-inch MacBook Pros. Then there’s its battery life, which Engadget’s Devindra Hardawar described as “terrible” in last year’s model. (Our review unit lasted a mere 2 hours, 17 minutes in PCMark 10’s benchmark.) Although we haven’t yet tested the 2026 update, its unchanged 99Wh battery capacity means you can’t stray too far from a power outlet.
On the ports front, the machine has one Thunderbolt 5, another Thunderbolt 4, three USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A, HDMI 2.1, 2.5Gb Ethernet, and a UHS-II SD card reader.
The Razer Blade 18 (2026) is available to order now from Razer’s website, which (amusingly but unsurprisingly) has separate sales pitches for gaming and AI.