RAZER has opted for a powerful Snapdragon 805 SoC with 4-cores, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of storage, WIFI AC and Gigabit Ethernet – the networking options are important for the PC game streaming capabilities. To make sure that players have a great controller, RAZER also has a matching controller (the “Serval”), which has been designed by the same team which worked on the Razer Sabertooth Xbox controller.
Prior to RAZER Forge, the NVIDIA Shield Series was the only truly serious hardware designed for Android gaming, but the $99 price is a great entry point when compared to the more expensive console or tablet from NVIDIA.
In terms of multimedia, the hardware capabilities can pretty much outmatch any media that you would throw at it. So, the real question is what kind of services are available. Android has a vast ecosystem, but you will need to do a little bit of homework to figure out what’s available and optimized for the TV.
As we mentioned earlier, RAZER Forge is also capable of streaming games from a local networked PC. Again, this is impossible not to compare this with the NVIDIA Shield products which introduced this capability and make it work neatly.
Called Cortex Stream, this feature claims to provide full HD, low-latency, game streaming over WiFi or Ethernet. Cortex can also run with any graphics hardware, whether it is NVIDIA or AMD.
It will be really interesting to see how the user interface works, and what the frame-rate and latency looks like in a real world situation. "THIS IS AN IMPRESSIVE PRODUCT"
At $99, RAZER Forge is extremely interesting and aggressively priced. It opens the possibility to have the most powerful Android apps running smoothly on a big screen and treats both multimedia and gaming seriously, in a price envelope that is on par with other TV boxes. This is an impressive product.
Product specs: