Razer’s new eGPU dock prices extra and delivers much less
Razer has ushered in a brand new Thunderbolt 5 era of exterior GPUs with the launch of the Core X V2, alongside its new Razer Thunderbolt 5 dock. Nevertheless it’s a noticeable step down from Razer’s earlier eGPUs.
One of many extra fashionable eGPUs of the Thunderbolt 3 era was the Core X, which supplied 650W of energy for a three-slot graphics card — which you needed to provide your self, in fact. The Core X V2 permits for GPUs as much as 4 slots large, however this time, you’ll want to supply each the GPU and energy provide.
Even worse, the unique Core X additionally included a handful of USB slots and a gigabit Ethernet port. The Core X V2 apparently doesn’t. As a substitute, Razer’s Core X V2 web page makes an attempt to promote you one in all Razer’s Thunderbolt docks as a substitute. At $349.99, that’s a troublesome capsule to swallow for potential Core X V2 consumers: you’ll want to purchase a graphics card, an influence provide, and perhaps an non-compulsory dock.
Razer’s first Thunderbolt 5 dock isn’t low cost, both. A Mercury White version prices $389.99, whereas the blinged-out RGB choice, the Chroma version, goes for $399.99.
Razer’s Core X V2 calls for so much out of your pockets
The Core X V2 accomodates a four-slot card, a step up from its predecessor. The V2 measures 16.59 inches deep by 7.76 inches large and eight.51 inches excessive, and is designed for ATX energy provides. The ventilated metal chassis additionally features a built-in 120mm fan for added cooling.
Razer says you’ll want to purchase an influence provide that may meet your card’s energy necessities, plus an extra 230W for the Core X V2 itself. (Presumably, that features powering the dock in addition to pushing 140W of energy to your laptop computer, in keeping with the Thunderbolt 5 specification.)
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Razer’s value is greater too, even after the omissions. The Razer Core debuted in 2016 for $500, adopted by the Core X for $299. Now, the worth has bounced up once more, even after chopping the ability provide the earlier fashions included.
At this level, you might be questioning why you’re spending $350 in case you nonetheless should fork over more money for an exterior GPU and an influence provide. However there’s one other concern: proper now, Thunderbolt 5 is usually discovered solely on high-end gaming laptops, which have already got a strong GPU. A part of the promise of an exterior GPU dock is which you can purchase a comparatively modest laptop computer, then join it to an exterior GPU card for after-hours gaming. That state of affairs doesn’t appear possible for just a few months but, or longer.
To be honest, Razer’s Core X V2 ought to work with PCs outfitted with Thunderbolt 4 ports. However the elevated bandwidth of Thunderbolt 5 matches higher with the high-end capabilities of at this time’s high-end GPUs.
Razer’s earlier dock bodes nicely for its new TB5 mannequin
A Thunderbolt 5 dock, nonetheless, appears to be a extra helpful choice. For now, most gaming laptops — once more, the place Thunderbolt 5 is debuting — nonetheless embody gobs of hardwired ports. However I actually favored the Razer Thunderbolt 4 Dock Chroma, which is an effective omen for the Thunderbolt 5 mannequin. (You’ll be capable to use the dock with a laptop computer or PC outfitted with Thunderbolt 4, too.) PCWorld included it in its listing of the most effective Thunderbolt docks.

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The Razer Thunderbolt Dock is a 10-port dock (hub), with three Thunderbolt 5 connections along with the devoted port between the dock and the laptop computer. That implies that the dock ought to help three 144Hz 4K shows. The dock additionally features a gigabit Ethernet port, a pair of 10Gbps USB-A connections, one 10Gbps USB-C connection, a UHS-II card slot and a mic/headphone jack. It’s additionally actively cooled, with a small fan inside.
Razer’s dock additionally ships with an open M.2 slot, particularly for PCIe Gen 4 x4 SSDs. I’ve beloved the efficiency a docked SSD gives. The dock additionally helps Thunderbolt Share, which might join two Thunderbolt-equipped PCs collectively. And, in fact, there’s the non-compulsory RGB, too.
The dock ships with a yr’s guarantee.

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Nothing’s low cost any extra, sadly. Razer’s newest Thunderbolt {hardware} appears nice, however the quantity you’ll spend actually places a damper on the bling.