Lenovo announced in November last year that it was teaming up with Razer to build a range of gaming systems, and its consumer line-up contains the first fruits of that collaboration, with a bunch of Razer-branded variants of its Y-series hardware.

Lenovo

Lenovo

Lenovo

The Lenovo ideacentre Y900RE ("Razer Edition") is a Skylake desktop system shipping with up to 32GB RAM and dual Nvidia GTX 970 graphics. The Razer tie-in shows in its accessories—it comes with a Razer BlackWidow keyboard and Mamba mouse—and a case with a painted interior and a window in the side. The Razer peripherals support Razer's "Chroma" feature: they can be lit up with a rainbow of different colors. The system will start at $2,299 and go on sale in June.

Lenovo

Lenovo

Lenovo

Lenovo

A gaming system needs a gaming monitor, and Lenovo has one of those too: the Y27g RE. This is a curved 27 inch 1920×1080 144Hz screen with Nvidia G-sync support and a 4-port USB 3 hub. The Razer-ness comes from Chroma lighting on the back. It'll be $599 in June. If you don't want the Chroma lighting, the same screen without the RE branding will be $549, also in June.

Lenovo

Lenovo

Lenovo

Lenovo

Lenovo

For those wanting portable gaming there's the ideapad Y900. This beast is a very traditional gaming laptop: a hulking 10.1lb 1.41 inch thick machine with a 17.3 inch 1920×1080 screen. This has a quad core Skylake processor that's apparently overclockable, paired with as much as 64GB RAM. Video is powered by an Nvidia GTX 980M with 4 or 8GB RAM.

Naturally, you'll want something to tote this laptop around in, and Lenovo has an answer for you there. The Y Gaming Armored Backpack is a $89.99 backpack available in May that sports the same Y-series branding as the computers. It just so happens to be sized for laptops up to 17.3 inches.

The Y branding gaming products doesn't stop there; Lenovo has a Y Gaming Mouse with 5 buttons and 4 DPI settings that'll be available in May from $39.99, and even a $49.99 gaming headset.

Lenovo

Lenovo

Lenovo

Lenovo is also introducing a rather neat looking home entertainment system, the ideacentre 610S. This compact and unusually styled PC comes with a wireless 720p microprojector that'll project a 110 inch picture onto any suitably sized wall. The specs aren't super high—a maximum of 16GB RAM, 2TB spinning disk or 128GB SSD, Skylake processor—though the system supports discrete GPUs up to an Nvidia GTX 750 Ti, and the machine has both Wi-Fi (up to 802.11ac) and wired gigabit Ethernet. It'll start at $849 in June, with the projector as standard.