
After weeks of testing, the new Razer Blade 16 is the gaming laptop I'd happily take anywhere
The Razer Blade 16 (2025) is a gaming monster, naturally, but also has fantastic battery life and a stunning screen. If you can afford one, it's a fantastic ultraportable powerhouse.
Pros Immense gaming muscle and desktop performance
Gorgeous, high refresh rate OLED screen
Genuinely impressive battery life for a gaming laptop
Cons Screen is very reflective
Ruinously expensive with an RTX 5090
Introduction
I'm not a fan of having to pick between high frame rates and portability. The most powerful gaming laptops are usually the biggest and heaviest – and rarely last more than a few hours as soon as you unplug their brick-like power adapters. Or at least, that used to be the case. Manufacturers have gotten much better at emphasising slimness and sleekness, without compromising on hardware. The new Razer Blade 16 might've just taken that to the extreme.
At a mere 17mm thick, it isn't that far off a modern MacBook Pro's dimensions, yet it finds room inside for top-tier Nvidia RTX 5090 mobile graphics. Razer has also opted for AMD internals for the first time to maximise battery life, and brought OLED display tech into the mix.
The laptop equivalent of a supercar never comes cheap, of course. The Blade 16 starts $2400/£2100 with an RTX 5060 GPU, but climbs up to a heady $4500/£3900 for the version tested here – and you can push that figure even further if you want extra RAM or storage. That puts it in the same ballpark as the equally svelte Asus ROG Zephyrus G16. Does the Razer do enough to justify its asking price?
How we test laptops
Every laptop reviewed on Stuff is tested using industry standard benchmarks and apps to assess performance and battery life. We use our years of experience to judge display, sound and general usability. Manufacturers have no visibility on reviews before they appear online, and we never accept payment to feature products.
Find out more about how we test and rate products.
Design & build: slender fan
Side by side with a 2023-era Blade (the last to use the old chassis), it's seriously impressive how much skinnier this new model is – despite having to make room inside for some particularly toasty components, not least the RTX 5090 GPU. Cleverly, Razer has pulled this thinning off by actually making the new laptop larger.
The 5mm of depth that's been shaved off has been added to the length of the laptop instead, but you'd only notice with a direct comparison. The footprint has barely grown, and it won't affect the sort of backpacks or laptop bags the Blade will slide into. That's handy, as given the new model is over 300g lighter than the old one, you're going to want to take it on the move a lot more.
I've long seen Razer laptops as the yin to Apple's yang, and that rings true again here. There's a clear family resemblance in the milled aluminium unibody, subtle Ouroboros logo on the lid, and green accented USB ports at the sides. The matte black finish is treated to prevent wear, and does a decent job at minimising fingerprint smudges too. It looks mean, without also being shouty; as gaming laptops go, it's wonderfully subtle unless you know what you're looking at.
The Blade also gets a big thumbs up for not skimping on connectivity in the name of slimness. You get two USB-Cs (one USB4, one USB 3.2) and three USB type-As, as well as full-size HDMI, a 3.5mm combination headset port, and a full-size SD card reader. Having them all at the sides makes it impossible to keep cables out of sight when gaming at a desk, but convenient for quickly plugging in peripherals.
Keyboard & touchpad: happy taps
Older Blades weren't the greatest laptops to type on, but this new one is a treat for your fingers. There's 50% more key travel than the last-gen chassis got, and the actuation force has been adjusted so it feels like you're pressing down with purpose before an input is detected. It's fairly quiet to tap away on unless you type like you're hammering nails, and each island-style key is comfortably spaced apart. It did take me a few hours to get used to how flat it all is, with no key recesses to help place your fingers.
Sensibly Razer hasn't tried to shoehorn in a numerical keypad, but has found a bit of space at the edge of the board for a few customisable macro keys. Holding down the fn button also switches the per-key RGB backlighting to highlight the top row's multimedia functions, making things like screen brightness and the mute key far easier to find. Doubling up on LEDs for these keys mean each key cap is perfectly lit, with next to no light bleed around the edges. You can customise the lot through Razer's Synapse software, too.
While I default to a wireless mouse for pretty much anything outside of the Windows desktop, the Blade's touchpad is a fine substitute when away from a desk. It's huge, with a low-friction surface that makes cursor movement a breeze. It's accurate and has a firm physical click action.
Screen & sound: how refreshing
Regardless of what spec you choose, every Blade 16 gets the same QHD+ resolution display. I'm not complaining – it's an absolute stunner, and I rarely used the last-gen Blade's dual resolution mode anyway. Here you're getting a 2560×1600 OLED with a rapid 240Hz refresh rate, which is ideal for hectic multiplayer gaming. While some LCD screens claim even faster refresh rates, OLED tech has inherently faster response times, so you're getting a gloriously smooth presentation here. Variable refresh all but prevents tearing when frame rates dip below 60fps, too.
OLED also means there's none of the light bloom or halo effect you got on the old Blade's mini-LED panel – just perfect blacks and impeccable contrast, which give dimly lit movie scenes and dark game levels outstanding amounts of depth. Colours are deliciously vibrant, helping Cyberpunk 2077's Phantom Liberty expansion feel even more immersive than usual.
There's a decent amount of brightness on tap, which helps give HDR content some welcome extra pop. Pretty much the only downside is how reflective the panel is; even at full whack, sitting by windows or underneath bright lights can be quite distracting.
The six-speaker sound system is a great match to the screen, getting impressively loud and with decent amounts of bass for a laptop. The mid-range is clear, and THX Spatial Audio does a convincing impression of surround sound. Treble could use just a little extra bite, but I didn't ever feel the need to plug in a headset unless I was gaming – and that was partly down to fan noise. The internal fans spin up to a noticeable degree as soon as you boot into a game, and are impossible to ignore when run at their maximum.
Performance: graphical greatness
Razer used to be all-in on Intel, but has made the switch to AMD power for this laptop generation. The Blade 16 kicks off with an AMD Ryzen AI 9 365, but steps up to a Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 once you add RTX 5090 graphics to your order. I've seen this twelve core, 24-thread chip in larger gaming laptops, but this is the first time I've tried one in such a skinny chassis. In my review unit it's paired with a 2TB NVMe SSD and 32GB of RAM.
For desktop duties, AMD's silicon trades back and forth with the last-gen Intel Core chips. The gap is fairly small, and there's ample oomph for all sorts of creative jobs like image editing. Synthetic tests show very little in the way of penalty for going slim, being roughly on par with the 18in MSI Stealth A18 AI+. Certain tasks – like video encoding – are just better suited to Intel's architecture, so keep in mind that newer doesn't always mean better – though AMD comfortably wins out on efficiency. More on that below.
Razer Blade 16 (2025) productivity benchmark scores Geekbench 6 single-core 2966 Geekbench 6 multi-core 15488 Geekbench AI 7643
You don't buy a Blade 16 to just work on the Windows desktop, of course. It's gaming where this laptop truly shines, the RTX 5090 GPU and its whopping 24GB of video memory absolutely churning through modern titles. At the 2560×1600 native resolution, none of the titles I tried ever dipped below 60fps as long as ray tracing stayed disabled. Counter Strike 2 comfortably saw frame rates in the 100-200fps range, which should be ideal for serious esports gamers.
Ray Tracing can still make the hardware sweat, Nvidia's upscaling tech is on hand to assist. DLSS 4.0 and multi-frame generation are scarily good, creating entirely new frames without the tearing, blurriness or input delay seen on previous iterations. Cyberpunk 2077 saw huge gains, from a barely playable 24.4fps with maximum path tracing but no upscaling, to a far smoother 53.9fps with DLSS. Doom: the Dark Ages was equally impressive, running smoothly even when the screen was filled with demons.
This is the fastest mobile GPU money can buy, hands down – but native rendering performance isn't a huge leap from the previous generation, and the RTX 5080 isn't that far behind. It's only with DLSS and multi-frame generation enabled that the 5000 series shows a truly generational leap from the 4000 series, and even then 4K gaming at maximum settings with ray tracing still looks out of reach in some titles. The Blade 16's more restrictive thermals also limit the 5090's potential a little, but not to the extent that games aren't playable. Frame rates never dipped at any point, even during a marathon play session.
Razer Blade 16 (2025) gaming benchmark scores Native rendering (2560×1600) DLSS upscaling 3DMark Steel Nomad 5821 N/A Cyberpunk 2077 (RT Overdrive) 24.43fps 53.9fps Cyberpunk 2077 (Ultra, RT off) 91.42fps 111.05fps Shadow of the Tomb Raider (RT on) 119fps 148fps Shadow of the Tomb Raider (RT off) 156fps 161fps Gears Tactics 130.6fps N/A
Arguably what impressed me most when benchmarking the Blade 16 was how long it lasted while away from the mains. When looping a local video at 50% brightness, I was getting close to ten hours. That's way more than I managed from the old Intel-powered Blade. Desktop working should see you closer to six or seven, which might be enough to see you through an entire working day – if you aren't tempted to game during your lunch break.
Depending on the title it can last between one and three hours here. That's still not a bad showing for a laptop with a green this big and a GPU this power-hungry.
Razer Blade 16 (2025) verdict
Razer laptops have always carried a certain gravitas, but I think the latest Blade 16 might be one of the first to truly deserve it. This is a gloriously potent gaming laptop, with the sort of screen you could happily stare at all day and enough ports at the sides to become a very effective desktop replacement. Yet it also has a long-lasting battery and is light enough that you can happily take it on the move.
OK, it's expensive, especially in 5090 guise – but name a laptop with that GPU that isn't. The 'Razer tax' does mean you pay a premium over the likes of Asus, MSI or Lenovo, but you're getting a design that's almost on par with Apple for your money. If you have the funds, it'll demolish any game you can throw at it for years to come.
Stuff Says…
Score: 5/5
The Razer Blade 16 (2025) is a gaming monster, naturally, but also has fantastic battery life and a stunning screen. If you can afford one, it's a fantastic ultraportable powerhouse.
Pros
Immense gaming muscle and desktop performance
Gorgeous, high refresh rate OLED screen
Genuinely impressive battery life for a gaming laptop
Cons
Screen is very reflective
Ruinously expensive with an RTX 5090
Razer Blade 16 (2025) technical specifications
Screen 16in, 2560×1600, 240Hz OLED Processor AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 Memory 32GB RAM Graphics Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 Laptop w/ 24GB RAM Storage 2TB Operating system Windows 11 Connectivity HDMI, 1x USB4 Type-C, 1x USB 3.2 Type-C, 3x USB, 3.5mm headphone port, SD card reader Battery 90Whr Dimensions 355x251x17.4mm, 2.14kg

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Stuff.tv
8 hours ago
- Stuff.tv
Android phones are set to get this Apple-inspired feature, finally
Android users could soon enjoy the kind of seamless device-to-device continuity Apple fans have long bragged about. A new feature called Handoff, spotted in the latest beta version of Google Play Services, looks set to bring Apple-style productivity syncing to Android smartphones and ChromeOS devices. Think of it like this: you're editing a document or browsing photos on your Galaxy or Pixel phone, then switch over to your Chromebook, and everything's just there. Files, notifications, even apps. It's the kind of ecosystem that's been missing from the Android world, and it could finally be on the way. This isn't totally out of the blue. Samsung already offers some neat cross-device tricks, like sharing your keyboard, trackpad and earbuds between a phone and tablet. Google, too, has dabbled, letting you move video calls between Android and ChromeOS and share mobile data with a Chromebook. But this new Handoff feature goes further. Buried inside Android's Cross-Device Services, recently spotted by Android Authority, it hints at file syncing, app continuity and notification sharing – the trifecta of multitasking magic. It's not live yet, but the clues are there. A newly added toggle in the beta build describes how users will be able to 'access files across your devices,' as long as they're signed in with the same Google account. Pair that with the recently spotted notification mirroring tool, and it's not hard to imagine a future where Galaxy devices talk to each other as smoothly as an iPhone and Mac. Of course, Apple's approach benefits from total ecosystem control. Google has a tougher job juggling dozens of manufacturers and devices. When it launches, Handoff will likely work best across Google's Pixel phones, Pixel tablets and Chromebooks. But Samsung's Galaxy ecosystem is also well-placed to take advantage, especially with the upcoming Galaxy S25 and Tab S10 likely to be first in line. It could finally give Android users the kind of joined-up experience they've been missing. It's early days, but if Google and Samsung get this right, Apple's continuity bragging rights might not last much longer. Liked this? Roku is rolling out a free upgrade to make movie nights easier


Stuff.tv
3 days ago
- Stuff.tv
These must-have features just made the Razer Blackshark V3 Pro my new go-to gaming headset
Stuff Verdict This ever-popular gaming headset is even more capable in its third generation. The Blackshark V3 Pro sounds stellar, has great connectivity, and adds effective ANC to the mix. Pros Familiar design is as comfortable as ever, while still evolving functionality Punchy and precise audio meets crystal clear mic quality Wired connections make a welcome return for those who need them Cons No high quality Bluetooth codecs You pay a premium for the uprated speaker drivers and mic Introduction Razer's esports-grade gaming headset has been around for over a decade now, through multiple iterations. In that time the Blackshark has become a pro player staple, and slowly evolved from a purely PC focus in order to bring console owners into the fold. This latest edition includes console support from the off, along with active noise cancellation for the first time. Plus it rights a few of the last-gen model's perceived wrongs. The Blackshark V3 Pro is the headline-grabbing hero model, with copious connectivity, lag-free wireless and a broadcast-grade boom mic – but then at $250/£250/€270, you'd rightly expect it to have the best tech going. It's joined by the cheaper Blackshark V3 and V3 X Hyperspeed, which forego some of the fancier features to hit a far more appealing price point. Does the Pro do enough to earn its place at the top of the tree? How we test headphones Every pair of earphones and headphones reviewed on Stuff is used for a minimum of a week's worth of daily listening. We use a playlist of test tracks made up of multiple genres to assess sound, and use our years of experience to compare to other models. Manufacturers have no visibility on reviews before they appear online, and we never accept payment to feature products. Find out more about how we test and rate products. Design & build: cleared for takeoff The V3 Pro doesn't look all that different from the last-gen Blackshark, but that's a good thing in my book: the old headset evolved Razer's aviator-style design into something more sleek and modern, and this model continues that trend. It's still an all-black affair – unless you go for the white version, which is more of a half-way house with its black ear cups and headband, or buy one of the console-specific models. The PlayStation and Xbox flavours get blue and green headband stitching respectively. Small refinements can be found when you go looking for them: the chunky volume dial on the left ear cup has a textured finish now, which makes it easier to grip. There are more buttons around the edges, but they're evenly distributed – and the ones you'll be pressing more are moved far away from the power button to avoid accidental switch offs. An embossed logo on each earcup is pretty subtle, but given the faceplates are just held on with magnets, it's a breeze to swap them out for something more colourful. Razer showed me a bunch branded with different esports team logos and mascots, but doesn't currently have any plans to sell them separately; I'm betting etsy and Aliexpress will quickly fill that void. This design makes it easier to replace the battery, though Razer will still take care of that for you should the need arise. As with most of its esports-grade peripherals, Razer has eschewed RGB lighting; there's just a single activity LED, which changes colour when swapping wireless modes. The reinforced metal headband sliders provide plenty of adjustment for different head sizes, and the 15 degrees of swivel helped me find a comfortable fit that didn't apply an excessive amount of pressure around my ears. The ear cushions are wrapped in hexagonal weave cloth, but have a leatherette layer underneath that both helps wick away sweat and increases background noise isolation. I've happily worn this headset through entire 9-5 working days, then popped it back on after dinner for an evening of gaming without any discomfort. I also like that the boom microphone still detaches easily when you don't need it. Razer had long sorted any issues with microphone drift with the outgoing Blackshark V2, and I didn't experience any during testing this new model. Features & battery: wireless wonder After the last-gen headset going exclusively wireless rankled some corners of the internet, Razer has course-corrected for 2025. The Blackshark V3 Pro still has built-in Bluetooth and includes one of the firm's Hyperspeed 2.4GHz dongles, but now you can also listen via a cable. You get USB-C and USB to 3.5mm cables in the box, so it should play nicely with just about any gadget. I can't say I felt the need to go back to wired play, though. The new Hyperspeed V2 connection is about as close to a cable as it gets, measuring just 10ms of latency – or 5ms faster than the V2 Pro (and virtually any rival) can manage. It's so low I couldn't detect any delay between the onscreen action and what I was hearing through the headset. Range was pretty good in my two-storey home, and I didn't experience any interference from my other wireless gear. That could partly be to the redesigned dongle now sitting on your desk at the end of a cable rather than plugging directly into your PC or console like a flash drive. It's still nice and compact, though, not taking up anywhere near as much desk space as the Razer Kraken V4 Pro's base station. You're not forced to pick between Hyperspeed and Bluetooth anymore, either. A new simultaneous mode lets you hear both sources at once, so you can be connected to voice comms through another device while hearing game audio from your PC. Just keep in mind you're limited to SBC or AAC Bluetooth – there's no higher quality codec support. The smart switch button on the right ear cup makes it easy to toggle between the three different modes. This is also where you'll find the new configurable roller, which can be set through Razer's Synapse software to adjust the game/voice chat balance, mic monitoring level, or footstep booster setting. The latter is based on your EQ profile, so you can have different settings for different games. You can save up to nine. The profile switcher button above the roller toggles through each one. I wish the roller could also be pressed in to make selections; that would open it up for full multimedia controls when not in-game, though the power button can do this already with double- and triple-taps. Battery life can max out at 70 hours with a Hyperspeed connection – but only when you've got ANC disabled. It'll drain faster with noise cancelling switched on. I could get through most of a working week without having to plug in, as my home office doesn't really call for noise cancelling. A full charge isn't the fastest, but 15 minutes is usually enough for a full evening of play. It could still do a better job of warning you when you're getting low on juice; I often forgot to check the activity LED before putting the headset on, and would miss its 30% warning. You can at least swap the dongle's LED from connection status to battery status, so it's always visible even when you're wearing the headset. It's also a good reason to download the Razer Audio app; the smartphone companion shows your exact percentage remaining on its homescreen. Interface: firing all Synapses The smartphone app lets you tweak pretty much every setting you'll find in the Synapse PC software, including the strength of the active noise cancellation, what the roller switch does, and the ultra-low latency 2.4GHz mode (which is on by default). You can also adjust each of the default equaliser presets using a 10-band EQ, push game-specific ones to the headset for titles like Valorant, Call of Duty and Counter Strike, and create your own from scratch. The Razer Headset Setup for Xbox app is a similar deal if you're gaming on that console. You'll still want to install Synapse to enable THX spatial audio on the Blackshark V3 Pro. This does a very convincing impression of 7.1.4 surround sound. I found it just as boomy in EQ profiles other than Game as before, but there's great separation between objects in front, behind, below and above you in games. It really expands the soundstage, too. The PS5 version plays nicely with 3D Tempest Audio, and the Xbox edition supports Windows Sonic on Xbox. There's almost as much adjustment for the microphone, which has a new larger 12mm capsule for clearer audio recording. The four EQ presets include specific modes for esports and broadcasting, the former upping the mid-highs for speech that better cuts through gaming audio, and the latter with warmer, deeper tones for a more studio-like sound. The 48Hz sampling rate is higher than you'll find from most headset rivals (though not every game or comms client broadcasts that high), and the internal/external pop filters help prevent plosives. Clarity is a huge improvement over the 16kHz competition. I was seriously impressed with how clear my voice sounded when recording locally, and co-op friends said I was coming through very clearly when playing online. Sound quality and noise cancelling: detail oriented The V3 Pro isn't Razer's first gaming headset with active noise cancellation onboard, but the tech has never appeared on a Blackshark before. It uses two mics on each ear – one internal and one external – to strip out a generous amount of background noise, even with the in-game volume set at a moderate level. These aren't really the kin of cans you wear outside the house, so heavily trafficked roads and public transport aren't the best test case for them – though I still gave it a go. They don't have the nuance of the best mainstream ANC headphones when it comes to sudden loud sounds, and the noise floor in general was higher than the likes of Bose or Sony, but for gaming headphones they put in a fantastic showing. Back at home, I could still make out the clack of my mechanical keyboard – but the ANC was far more effective than any pair of passively isolating headphones, including the Logitech G Pro X 2 I normally use. They have the edge over the few gaming headsets I've tried with ANC, too. On the audio side, the Blackshark V3 Pro gets the latest version of Razer's 50mm dynamic drivers. They're larger than the 40mm ones found in the Kraken V4 Pro, and get new driver plugs that halve harmonic distortion compared to the outgoing Blackshark V2. They still use bio-cellulose diaphragms, which are super thin to help separate frequencies, but the magnets are stronger now. The result is a crisp and clean-sounding headset that really lets fine details shine through while gaming – but one that doesn't sound overly sharp or shrill, regardless of EQ mode. I found this high-end brilliance helped me pick out subtle positional clues like breaking glass or quiet footsteps that bit easier than with the old headset. These are still gaming headphones at heart, so even the default preset has a good amount of bass punch, but it doesn't interfere with the mid-range very much in movies or music. They can rumble when they need to, for explosions and gunshots in games, and for energetic sub-bass in electronic tunes. They're balanced enough to be your everyday headset, no just when you're gaming. Razer Blackshark V3 Pro verdict Tech made with professional gamers in mind can sometimes be a little too focused, deleting features that appealed to the wider fanbase in order to earn a spot on an esports stage. The Blackshark V3 Pro treads the line perfectly, still prioritising the comfort and sound quality that made the last one so popular but adding some welcome extra functionality. Noise cancelling and simultaneous audio make it a much more versatile headset, and a more multi-platform one to boot. While the speaker drivers and microphone are a definite step up, though, they come at quite the premium. Going even further upmarket than the last-gen V2 Pro was a bold move by Razer; not everyone will be able to justify the Pro's asking price when the regular V3 is $100/£100 cheaper and has an otherwise very similar feature set. But if you want Razer's best sound, this is undoubtedly it. Stuff Says… Score: 5/5 This ever-popular gaming headset is even more capable in its third generation. The Blackshark V3 Pro sounds stellar, has great connectivity, and adds effective ANC to the mix. Pros Familiar design is as comfortable as ever, while still evolving functionality Punchy and precise audio meets crystal clear mic quality Wired connections make a welcome return for those who need them Cons No high quality Bluetooth codecs You pay a premium for the uprated speaker drivers and mic Razer Blackshark V3 Pro technical specifications Drivers 50mm dynamic ANC Yes Connectivity USB-C, 2.4GHz wireless, Bluetooth, 3.5mm Codecs supported AAC, SBC Battery life Up to 70 hours (PC) Up to 48 hours (Xbox/Playstation) Weight 367g


Stuff.tv
4 days ago
- Stuff.tv
How to back up your iPhone and iPad to iCloud or PC/Mac
As the famous saying goes: 'smart people back up'. OK, we just made that up, but it should be a famous saying, and it's very much the right thing to do. So here's how to back up your iPhone and/or iPad. Our advice is to back up your Apple devices today, and keep doing so – automatically to iCloud and/or regularly to your Mac or PC. Many devices fail every single day, often without warning. Don't let your data be consigned to oblivion when there's really no need. This is especially important if you run beta software. There's loads of great stuff in the iOS 26 and iPadOS 26 betas Apple has unleashed ahead of September. But if you mash that install button without first protecting your data, don't be surprised if your enthusiasm returns to smack you in the face. So, again, back up your important iOS and iPadOS data. Before we get really grumpy. Stick with it: iOS 18 Not so keen to live at the cutting edge? Unsure whether your device will cope with a new OS? You're in luck: even when a new OS is fully baked, Apple provides the choice between two software update versions in Settings. Go to Settings > General, then tap Software Update. You'll see the shiny new option and – when they're available – bug and security fixes for the previous version. Choose the one you want to install. How to backup to iCloud Head to Settings > [your name] > iCloud > 'Saved to iCloud'. Turn on relevant options that aren't activated to keep important data safe, such as calendars, reminders, and browser bookmarks. This will now be synced to iCloud. Even if an update turns your iPhone/iPad into a pretty brick (unlikely), you can download this data to another device (and access it at in the meantime). Next, head to 'iCloud Backup', tap 'Back Up Now', and enter your password. If you don't use your device much, it'll start backing up. (Be on Wi-Fi, unless you hate yourself.) If you've loads of apps that store a ton of data locally, you'll need to buy more iCloud space, because Tim Cook needs a new yacht and only gives you a miserly 5GB for free. Buy more storage in iCloud > 'Manage Storage' > 'Change Storage Plan'. Alternatively, head into Backups, choose your device, and figure out if there's any data you can do without if everything goes wrong. Oh, and iCloud back ups take ages, so don't do this at the last minute. How to back up to Finder or iTunes If you're on Windows, this option involves iTunes. Sorry. Connect your device to your computer using a cable, and select it in the iTunes toolbar. Select Summary from the sidebar that then appears. Under the Backups section, you'll see when you last backed up, and where that back up went. Unless you usually don't back up, in which case hang your head in shame and continue. Click 'Back Up Now'. This backs up your device data to your computer, and you can later recover from this backup, in the event of disaster. We strongly recommend using the Encrypt option, so your Health app data and passwords go along for the ride. (You'll need to enter a bespoke password to get at that backup later. Note that down somewhere safe.) Again, the process isn't swift, but it is necessary. Relying solely on a single iCloud backup as a disaster recovery system is brave. And by 'brave' we mean 'bonkers'. If you're a Mac user, iTunes has long been consigned to history. Hurrah! Only the process is almost identical and now instead lurks in Finder – select your device from Locations, choose the General tab, click 'Encrypt local backup' and then 'Back Up Now'. Well, assuming you're using macOS 10.15 or later. Earlier Macs will still have iTunes. How to backup iPhone and iPad photos and videos Your phone's full of photos that help you recall precious memories (or painful drunken ones), and so don't risk losing them. Apple provides options for keeping pics and videos safe. Ideally, just turn on iCloud Photos (in Settings. > Apps > Photos), which syncs your entire photo library (videos, photo edits and all) to iCloud. You'll need enough iCloud storage for everything you've shot – and the patience of a saint while it uploads. However, iCloud syncs don't always work perfectly, so consider going old-school again as well. Plug your device into your computer. If you're using a Mac, use Photos to import copies of your photos and videos. Make sure in Photos > Settings > iCloud, you have 'Download Originals to this Mac' turned on. Should your library be larger than your local storage, consider placing it on an external SSD (Settings > General > 'Library Location') and back that up regularly. If you're using a PC, use the Windows Photos app, or right-click your device in File Explorer, select 'Import pictures and videos', and follow the wizard. Now read: Best iPhone in 2025 ranked from best to worst