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12.5" is by far too small.
if its a 720p or lower it will look like crap
@OP
If you want to actually game at that resolution, you'd need to keep it docked.
I haven't tried gaming on a laptop that small, but I have tried a tablet that is nearly as large (10.5" screen, 2560*1600). It works fine for tablet games, which are designed with a tablet UI in mind. I'm not sure how well it would work with Windows UI.
Ultra HD requires 3x-4x the GPU horsepower to get equivalent frame rates to 1920x1080.
You can get a GPU enclosure for it, so that you can actually run games on it.
I've gamed on an 11.6" screen before (Alienware M11x). The problem is that a screen that small is just too small in general... not just for gaming.
If you're on a budget, do not buy a Razer laptop. Do not buy a first-gen Razer laptop. If you want gaming, you can get some decent gaming laptops for $1000-$1200 that run something like an nVidia GeForce 960M on a 15" 1080p screen. That is going to be a lot more reasonable as a gaming laptop than whatever Razer is planning on releasing.
Also, it doesn't come with a GPU, so you need to get your own.
Doesn't seem like such a great deal TBH.
Let me put it this way...
Do you actually *NEED* a gaming laptop? Or do you really just want a gaming PC, and think that it would be a nifty nice-to-have feature if that gaming PC was portable?
An example of someone who NEEDS a gaming laptop: A road warrior professional who is hopelessly addicted to PC gaming, and spends a lot of evenings in hotel rooms.
An example of someone who does NOT need a gaming laptop: A student that likes PC gaming, and needs to take their laptop to class. They need a laptop, but they don't need to play games when they are on the go.
If you don't need a gaming laptop, don't buy one. It will be pretty obsolete in 2 years, and you won't be able to salvage or upgrade it in any meaningful way. So if you spend $1200 on a gaming laptop now, you need to be OK with the idea of throwing that laptop in the trash 2 years from now.