Razer

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Razer is an American headquartered company. It sells a variety of hardware including computer peripherals and laptops.

Razer
Basic Information
Release Year 2011
Product Type Hardware
In Production Yes
Official Website https://www.razer.com/

Consumer impact summary

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Overview of concerns that arise from the conduct towards users of the product (if applicable):

  • User freedom
  • User privacy
  • Business model
  • Market control

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Incidents

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This is a list of all consumer-protection incidents this company is involved in. Any incidents not mentioned here can be found in the Razer category.

Poor quality products:

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Laptop battery swelling:

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Across the entire Razer Blade product line, many laptops are known to develop swelling batteries.[1] Which are highly likely to randomly combust or explode and requires great caution to replace and discard.[2]

Laptop adapters catching fire:

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Here is one article talking about the problem: https://www.notebookcheck.net/Razer-may-want-to-consider-a-recall-for-their-Blade-and-Blade-Pro-AC-adapters.426448.0.html

Replacement part disorganization and anti-consumerism:

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This was documented by Andy Harding at Salem Techsperts, where Razer refused to sell a replacement battery to him, claiming the laptop was a "Legacy model" (While not being listed or featured as such on their website), and saying to "contact a repair shop". After a comment from the SalemTechsperts YouTube channel got over 8000 likes citing the problem on a video criticising Razer, they then offered to sell a genuine battery to him, reassuring him they do, in fact, have a battery. A few updates have come since then, whereas later then Razer claimed to not have any replacement batteries, then later claiming again to actually have a battery, prompting dramatic backlash from the community.

 
Screenshot of Razer's Warranty Policy with the mentioned clauses highlighted

Problematic warranty policy:

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Razer's Warranty Policy contains anti-customer clauses such as:

Exclusions and Limitations. This Limited Warranty does not cover:

  • problems with and/or damage to the Product caused by using accessories, parts, or components not made by Razer;
  • damage caused by service (including upgrades and expansions) performed by anyone who is not officially acting as an employee, representative or sub-contractor of Razer;[3]

These clauses limit customer freedom and allows Razer a vector to be able to reject valid warranty claims.

Products

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See also

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Link to relevant theme articles or companies with similar incidents.


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References

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  1. u/lsiu (2021-11-15). "The infamous razer battery swelling/bulging". Redlib. Archived from the original on 2026-06-03. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  2. "What to do with a swollen battery". iFixit. Archived from the original on 2026-06-03. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  3. "Razer Warranty Policy". Razer. Archived from the original on 2026-06-03. Retrieved 2026-06-03.