First Look: Razer Core X

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Extra space affords extra power, however, which is why Razer is introducing the Razer Core X, a plug-and-play external graphics card
range, but can be considered a stripped-down, bare-bones version focusing on graphics performance rather than the bells and whistles of the
practicality and gaming grunt when you return home
A Thunderbolt 3 cable is then all you need to immediately get the two devices working together, with smart Razer software doing the hard
work of making it truly plug-and-play.A relatively wide array of cards are compatible with the Core X too, from an Nvidia GeForce GTX 750 up
to a GTX Titan X, to an Nvidia Quadro GP100 up to a Quadro P4000, and from an AMD Radeon R9 285 to a Vega RX 64
Whatever your preferred manufacturer, providing you have a relatively recent card you should be covered
However, you can pair the core with a Thunderbolt-enabled Mac running High Sierra 10.13.4 or above, depending on its own AMD graphics card
being compatible
graphics support
Make sure to check the individual configuration of your machine is compatible before laying down the cash though.So, how easy is the thing
releases an internal chassis, pop your GPU of choice in and connect its power supply, slide the chassis back into the case, lock the lever
and plug it into your computer
gaming laptop to judge its performance, and just how seamless the system works in reality
But at a concept level, and given the known performance of earlier Core models, this looks like a relatively cost effective way to get some
extra grunt into your lower-powered laptops