Business Insider/Jeff Dunn
Case in point: Project Valerie, a new concept laptop from gaming hardware company Razer has three built-in screens. Three screens!
They aren't cheap screens, either: Each are huge 17-inch panels, loaded up with overly sharp 4K resolutions and Nvidia's G-Sync tech for smoother frame rates while gaming.
Razer has no current plans to make this available to the public, and it doesn't know how much the device would cost if it ever did move beyond the concept stage, so any talk about specs is a bit beside the point.
But for what it's showing off in Las Vegas this week, Razer has modified the already-powerful Razer Blade Pro - what with its mechanical keyboard, and top-of-the-line GeForce GTX 1080 graphics card - made it heavier (around 12 pounds) and twice as thick (about 1.5 inches), and built in a mechanism that lets you slide out and snap back the two additional displays from behind the central one.
Business Insider/Jeff Dunn
That's a good start, but Razer says any finished product like this would use software to automates the slide-out mechanism and let you angle the displays as needed. Anything pushing this many pixels would likely need more than a single GTX 1080 card to run comfortably, though what I saw stayed relatively free of awkwardness.
Business Insider/Jeff Dunn
Still, yes, it's hard to get past that ridiculousness. Razer says that it's focusing on the power user and gaming enthusiast market for now, but that it's possible that it could translate the display setup to a more portable chassis sometime down the road. It also says that it could make it so you could only slide out one display at a time, which would seem a little more practical for anything outside of gaming.
None of this gets around the fact that this thing would likely be super expensive and have terrible battery life - the Blade Pro starts at $3,700 and lasts about 3-4 hours with one display, let alone three. It'd also have a hard time staying cool or quiet, to put it mildly. But for now, Project Valerie as a concept is both intriguing and comically absurd. That's fitting for CES.