- ■
Razer launches 2026 Blade 16 with Intel’s Core Ultra 9 386H Panther Lake chip, abandoning AMD after one generation
- ■
Pricing starts at $3,499.99 (RTX 5080/32GB/1TB) and reaches $4,499.99 for top RTX 5090 config with 2TB storage
- ■
The switch gives Intel a flagship gaming win as it battles AMD and Apple in mobile performance
- ■
Cheaper RTX 5070 Ti model coming later at undisclosed price, expanding the lineup downmarket
Razer just dropped its 2026 Blade 16 gaming laptop with a critical chip swap that signals Intel’s comeback in the high-performance gaming market. The company ditched AMD processors in favor of Intel’s new Core Ultra 9 386H “Panther Lake” chip, paired with faster RAM and Nvidia’s RTX 50-series GPUs. Starting at $3,499 for the RTX 5080 configuration and topping out at $4,499 for the flagship RTX 5090 model, the refresh keeps last year’s thin chassis while promising significant speed and battery improvements.
Razer is making a big bet on Intel’s latest silicon. The gaming hardware maker just launched its refreshed Blade 16 laptop with Intel’s Core Ultra 9 386H “Panther Lake” processor, marking a swift departure from the AMD-powered configuration it released just last year. The move hands Intel a high-profile design win in the premium gaming segment where AMD had been making inroads.
The new Blade 16 is available now directly from Razer with two configurations ready to ship. The base model at $3,499.99 packs an Nvidia RTX 5080 GPU, 32GB of RAM, and a 1TB SSD. Spring for the $4,499.99 flagship and you get the RTX 5090 with double the storage at 2TB. Both run the same Intel Core Ultra 9 386H chip paired with what Razer claims is significantly faster memory than previous generations.
The Panther Lake processor represents Intel’s latest attempt to reclaim performance leadership in mobile computing after years of watching AMD chip away at its market share. By scoring the Blade 16 design, Intel gets its new architecture into one of gaming’s most recognizable premium brands. It’s a validation point the company needs as it fights to stay relevant against AMD’s Ryzen momentum and Apple’s M-series chips redefining what laptop processors can do.
Razer kept the industrial design unchanged from last year’s model, maintaining the thin chassis that made the Blade 16 distinctive in a market where gaming laptops often resemble sci-fi props. The decision to prioritize internal upgrades over external redesign suggests Razer thinks the chip swap alone justifies a new model year – a notable vote of confidence in Panther Lake’s capabilities.
