Razer Launches Dedicated AI Developer PCs

2026-01-07



Razer has become the latest PC gaming company to enter the race for AI investment, but it's not just slapping an "AI" label on existing products. While it is indeed repositioning its high-performance Blade 18 laptop and Core X V2 eGPU enclosure as "AI development hardware," the company is also launching a brand-new workstation specifically engineered for AI training, inference, and simulation workloads.


The Razer Forge AI Development Workstation features a rack-ready design, enabling easier deployment of dense clusters in data centers or professional environments. It supports up to four AMD or Nvidia GPUs, comes equipped with eight DDR5 memory slots, and is powered by AMD’s Ryzen Threadripper Pro processor. The system accommodates a 2000W power supply and includes dual 10Gb Ethernet ports to ensure rapid data transfer speeds essential for large-scale AI operations.


Razer has not yet disclosed pricing or availability details, as the Forge will be offered as a customizable solution—customers must contact Razer’s sales team directly for configuration and ordering. This latest move follows closely after NVIDIA’s announcement at last year’s CES of its Digits personal AI supercomputer, signaling a growing trend in the industry that is likely to inspire similar offerings from other tech firms.