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posted by Fnord666 on Monday July 10 2017, @09:33AM   Printer-friendly
from the can-they-cut-ut dept.

http://www.anandtech.com/show/11611/razer-files-for-ipo-in-hong-kong-to-raise-600-million

This week Razer has made a preliminary filing for IPO on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. The company plans to raise $600 million for future growth, particularly in Asia. In addition, the funding is supposed to improve the company's overall march with investments in R&D as well as the brand. Razer's recent financial filings indicate Razer operated at a $20m profit in 2012-2013, but ran a loss of ~$70m in 2015-2016 because of multiple acquisitions as well as a tripling in R&D activities with a small uptick in revenue.

Razer started as a subsidiary of a computer peripheral maker Kärna in 1998 and quickly became famous for its Boomslang mouse designed specifically for FPS gamers and launched in 1999. Kärna ceased to exist in 2000 because of financial issues, but the Boomslang was so popular despite its price tag (which was high by the standards of the year 2000) that Terratec brought the Razer Boomslang back to market in 2003. Min-Liang Tan and Robert Krakoff (who used to be the GM of Kärna back in the day) acquired rights to the IP and the brand sometime in 2005 and established Razer Inc., as we know it today. Initially, Razer focused on mice, but the company gradually expanded its product portfolio with keyboards, headsets and other peripherals. Sometime in 2009-2010, Razer began to hire engineers from PC companies like Dell and HP with an aim to develop actual systems and go beyond peripherals. Today, the company offers various gaming gear, laptops, co-developed Razer Edition PC systems, and licenses its designs to others. Meanwhile, Razer is always in pursuit to expand its lineup of products and their distribution.

Previously: Razer Acquires Ouya Software Assets, Ditches Hardware
Razer's New Blade Pro: Desktop Performance in 0.9 Inches and 8 Lbs
Razer Prototypes Stolen at CES


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  • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Monday July 10 2017, @11:46AM (6 children)

    I dig the hell out of Razer kit. Excellent functionality, quality components, and nearly Model-M durable.

    No, I don't own their stock; just their products.

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  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 10 2017, @12:01PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 10 2017, @12:01PM (#537087)
    Excellent functionality*

    * until your internet goes out and the DRM driver ceases to function leaving you with a nice expensive (but oh-so-EXTREME) green-pulsating paperweight
    • (Score: 1) by Beau Slim on Monday July 10 2017, @06:58PM

      by Beau Slim (6628) on Monday July 10 2017, @06:58PM (#537266)

      The Cloud is the latest thing! Let's cloud-enable our mouse driver! And make it do popups while players are in the middle of a game! Because that's more important than the driver actually working reliably. But, hey, you can get offline mode to work properly if you set it and reboot a few times...

      Fortunately, Karabiner for macOS and a couple tweaks to xml files lets you use the Naga's numpad without Razer's driver. I haven't quite sorted that out on Windows though.

  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by lx on Monday July 10 2017, @12:41PM

    by lx (1915) on Monday July 10 2017, @12:41PM (#537096)

    After IPO that'll be history.
    Increasing shareholder value rarely coincides with increasing customer value.

  • (Score: 2) by LoRdTAW on Monday July 10 2017, @02:18PM (1 child)

    by LoRdTAW (3755) on Monday July 10 2017, @02:18PM (#537120) Journal

    I was never a fan of their mice after two I've owned wore out from moderate FPS use in about a year (forget the model). I've had older, cheaper, MS mice that have lasted way longer. Don't know if they are any better today. All my mice have been Logitech ever since. They took over production of the Nostromo from Belkin, a gaming keypad that replaces the keyboard when gaming. At first I was livid when they took over the production as they replaced the simpler Belkin software with their own mess with no way to import key mappings. But they have made good progress and fixed most of the problems and even improved the design.

    • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Monday July 10 2017, @04:25PM

      by JoeMerchant (3937) on Monday July 10 2017, @04:25PM (#537155)

      I'm sure it's a matter of taste, but I like my Anker mouse - so much so that I bought identical ones for work and home.

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  • (Score: 2) by bob_super on Monday July 10 2017, @05:23PM

    by bob_super (1357) on Monday July 10 2017, @05:23PM (#537190)

    > nearly Model-M durable.

    I can't talk to durability yet, but I bought an XBox-like PC game pad from them after one of the reviewers pointed out it has clicky buttons (which was most of that review, in fact).
    It doesn't sound like much of a feature, but in the vast field of console controller clones, there's just something to be said for the guys who remember the appeal of clicky controls.