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Well, I bought an MSI system, and the last generation of MSI systems were basically MADE to be a landmine so that you couldn't upgrade them without a lot of effort. So they were effectively impossible to upgrade. It ALSO DIED in 6 months, so I actually had to get my computer REPLACED at the beginning of covid, because it was in the shop for 2 months already, and I had NO idea where the world was headed. After looking at various reviews, it seems that until recently many laptop companies either boobytrap their laptops, or solder things in to prevent things like upgrades, REGARDLESS OF WHAT THEY MAY APPEAR TO CLAIM OTHERWISE. Some STILL do this, but thankfully people are starting to move BACK to the consumer model. When I asked for a replacement of the MSI that was NOT MSI, I was offered an Alienware system. BTW they made the choice on THEIR assessment of monetary value, and NOT about anything MEANINGFUL like the customers desires, needs, or use case. The Alienware FAILED in all ways with me, but the alienware that I was offered ALSO had SOLDERED RAM! That meant NO UPGRADE PATH! Also, if a problem happened with memory(I have seen this happen no less than 4 times), you would NOT be able to fix it yourself! SO CHECK THAT! BTW the alienware was BAD for me, because the color, style, and look were NOT business like, the computer ITSELF was NOT up-gradable or CLOSE, so I would be throwing the money I had down a toilet, and it just didn't match what I wanted. BTW this razer blade, though their tech support STINKS, IS up-gradable! The RAM can only be upgraded to 32GB apparently, the SSD can be upgraded up to only 2TB apparently, The SATA can apparently only be upgraded up to 4TB. I got so fed up working with the limitations of the base model, for my needs, that before I realized I hadn't determined how I wanted to proceed, I had already upgraded the ram to 32GB, and figured I would do that SATA also. So I got it to the BASE specs I originally wanted. But outside of needing a torx screwdriver, it was fast and easy as it should be. If it lasts long enough, and the prices come down as I think they will, I might upgrade everything all the way! 8) As for the RAZER being higher in price? It seems to be a nice system, checks all the boxes, so I don't think anyone would call it a cheap computer. The price seems to mostly be NAME, build quality, and the fact that it is actually milled aluminum, that is anodized. I WISH I could say it had super fantastic features, etc...., but the consensus is as I stated in the order I stated. OH, and the fact that it has the GPU is, FOR ME, the biggest thing adding to the price. I don't care if it has the GPU, etc..... but some DO, and THAT is EXPENSIVE! NOT only is the GPU expensive, but there is the supporting hardware, tweaking of everything to standards, and the improved cooling system to cool IT also! Basically, the GPU provides a way to offload graphics processing. It would be GREAT if you like playing games with lots of advanced graphics at high speed. Other wise, it really doesn't mean much. If you don't need the GPU, you can find a system without it, and it could EASILY knock the cost down 1-2 thousand dollars! THIS one seems so cheap compared to what I just said because it is a lower end and older GPU. STILL, it adds several hundred to the cost!
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