The world’s biggest PC vendor is getting serious about gaming, and
it’s recruited one of gamers’ favorite peripherals brands to help it
establish its legitimacy. Lenovo and Razer today announce a major new
partnership that will see them co-brand a range of Razer Edition Lenovo
PCs, starting with the Y series of desktop towers that made their debut
at IFA in September.
The first prototype product of this collaboration is on show over at
the Dreamhack Winter LAN party in Sweden today, and the two companies
have ambitions to extend their relationship into joint product
development as well.
A superficial look at the first Razer Edition from Lenovo shows the
familiar Y series chassis, with only the accent color changing from red
to Razer’s signature green (along with new multichromatic lighting
giving off a glow from underneath the case).
Adding the Razer aesthetic will be just the start for Lenovo,
however, as the big Chinese company is conscious of how savvy gamers are
and promises this partnership is about more than just marketing. Future
Lenovo gaming PCs will also benefit from Razer’s software expertise,
which has been demonstrated with things like Razer Comms, Synapse, and
Cortex, a suite of useful tools for managing and optimizing settings for
games.
Razer also has a loyal and vocal fan base, which Lenovo says will be
heeded in the development and refinement of future products.
Gaming is “one area of the PC market that’s actually growing,”
Lenovo’s Victor Rios tells The Verge, “and for us, what’s also been
exciting, is that it’s relatively stable.” As the company’s vice
president and general manager for workstation and gaming computers, he’s
leading this new initiative.
Along with fellow PC makers Acer and Asus, Lenovo is making a big bet
on gaming as a driver for renewed sales of high-end PCs that command
healthier profit margins. The esteem in which Razer’s gaming keyboards
and mice are held should help spur that, though Rios acknowledges that
many of the most committed gamers will still prefer to build their own
gaming rig.
Lenovo’s Razer Edition PCs will be about combining the convenience of
not having to chase down every single component yourself with the
astute design choices that only a seasoned gamer will make. That means
no software bloat, no superfluous extras (kaleidoscopic LED lights
excepted), just a focus on great performance and reliability. Such is
the plan, anyway.
Razer and Lenovo also see a lot of potential in virtual reality
applications as catalysts for purchases of more powerful PCs — which
might bring a more casual consumer to the high-end PC market. Together,
the two companies will try to capitalize on these trends by working
jointly on developing new product categories as their collaboration
deepens through 2016.
The first officially announced PCs from this partnership will launch
at CES 2016 in Las Vegas in January, to be followed by a gradual
expansion as the year progresses. Razer isn’t tying itself to Lenovo in
any exclusive way, but this is going to be the focus of its efforts for
the foreseeable future.

