USA TODAY US Edition

Gaming PC is all work, too

Razer goes after non-gamers,

- Eli Blumenthal @eliblument­hal USA TODAY

Razer, best known in gaming circles for its accessorie­s and sponsorshi­p of competitiv­e gaming competitio­ns, is pushing hard to sell laptops even non-gamers could love.

The 11-year-old Irvine, Calif.based company’s recently released Razer Blade Stealth is built for traditiona­l PC users as well as gamers. The specs and design — featuring high-resolution touchscree­ns, powerful Intel processors and a Chroma keyboard that allows keys to be backlit in different colors — plus $999 starting price put it in the market to compete with Apple’s 13-inch MacBook Air and Dell’s XPS 13.

“What we want to do is to make sure that there is a Razer Blade Stealth in every Starbucks, in every office, in every home,” Min-Liang Tan, Razer’s co-founder and CEO, told USA TODAY. “And slowly but surely hopefully convert as many of them to PC gamers as we can.”

To that end, Razer has begun opening retail stores à la Apple and Microsoft. After initial RazerStore­s opened earlier this month in Taipei, Taiwan, then in Manila and Bangkok, the PC maker on Saturday will open its first U.S. site, a standalone flagship store in San Francisco.

The 1,300-square-foot concept store in the Westfield San Francisco Centre will have more than 20 PC and console gaming stations. A 16-by-9-foot screen will display video seen by those inside and outside the store. San Francisco, Tan said, “is a unique global epicenter of creativity, technology and entertainm­ent, and it’s our home town, so creating a phenomenal environmen­t for gamers here was a very special endeavor.”

Its strategy of expanding into the traditiona­l PC market comes as the industry comes to grip with a prolonged decline in demand.

Global PC shipments in the first quarter fell to their lowest level since 2007, according to research firm Gartner. It was the sixth-straight quarter of falling shipments.

But the typical PC user isn’t the end goal for Razer. Instead, it wants to use its new laptop to attract future gamers. A $499 Core accessory allows gamers to add an external graphics card.

“The decline in the PC market is primarily attributab­le to the fact that tablets do a lot of the same things that people use PCs for, particular­ly casual use,” says Michael Pachter, an analyst at Wedbush Securities. But you can’t substitute a tablet for workspace computing or gaming, he points out.

In fact, gaming on PCs is on the rise, a trend reflected in the recent quarterly report of Nvidia. The graphics chipmaker reported a jump in profits, boosted by demand for its gaming-focused products.

“Razer is managing the growth of PC gaming brilliantl­y by offering a gaming laptop. Anyone who actually needs a PC for productivi­ty is a target, and Razer has a gamer-friendly (and gamer-first) strategy,” Pachter said in an email interview.

It’s not alone — Origin PC, based in Miami, and Maingear Inc., based in New Jersey, also specifical­ly target the PC gaming market. Larger computer makers including Dell, through its Alienware brand, Asus and Lenovo also make PCs targeted toward gamers.

It makes sense for manufactur­ers to devote their attention to PC gamers. The market for PC gaming is larger than even that of mobile gaming, at $32 billion in 2015 compared with mobile’s $25 billion, according to gaming research firm SuperData Research.

“What we’re trying to do is really try and disrupt the PC market,” adds Tan. “We expect to be one of the top OEMs over the next couple of years, globally.”

“We want ... a Razer Blade Stealth in every Starbucks, in every office, in every home. And slowly but surely hopefully convert as many of them to PC gamers as we can.” Min-Liang Tan

 ?? RAZER ??
RAZER
 ?? PHOTOS BY RAZER ?? The Razer Blade Stealth is lighter than a typical gaming laptop; its fragging horsepower is kept in a separate dock.
PHOTOS BY RAZER The Razer Blade Stealth is lighter than a typical gaming laptop; its fragging horsepower is kept in a separate dock.
 ??  ?? With its Blade Stealth, Razer hopes to capitalize on the fact that gaming on PCs is on the rise. Razer opens its first U.S. store in San Francisco this week.
With its Blade Stealth, Razer hopes to capitalize on the fact that gaming on PCs is on the rise. Razer opens its first U.S. store in San Francisco this week.
 ??  ?? Min-Liang Tan is co-founder and CEO of Razer.
Min-Liang Tan is co-founder and CEO of Razer.

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