Hmm... so this caters to the left-handed gamers with hunt-and-peck typing skills and enormous wallets?
Because I can't honestly see any other reason to put a touch-sensitive area on the right side of the keyboard when any right-handed gamer will be using their right hand for the mouse (or touchpad, if Razer doesn't provide a Razer mouse with this). Unless they expect a 10-button touchpad to replace the mouse as an input device, in which case I'll alternate between laughing hysterically and asking why a company built on mice is abandoning them.
I also can't see any good reason for said touch-sensitive area to have display capabilities when you're expected to be looking at the screen. Just how often do you look down at your keyboard during gaming? Just how often could you look down at your keyboard during gaming? Anyways, given that only a tiny portion of the gaming population will have a Blade, how many developers will spend the time to display something useful down there? The display image shows a game of (what I think is) DotA 2, and the secondary screen is just re-displaying part of the minimap. Oh, goodie, something that's already displayed on the main screen is re-displayed in an incredibly awkward position! Awesome!!
Finally, the whole concept of a gaming laptop is vaguely laughable. 7 pounds of weight isn't horrible and the form factor is small, so it's potentially somewhat portable... but still, how often are you away from home and think "Damn, I really need my Crysis fix, good thing I have a top-of-the-line gaming laptop to play it!" Seriously, $2800 for something that will be obsolete (and un-upgradeable) within three years? When you could spend less than $1000 for an equally-powerful desktop that'll only cost a couple hundred to bring up to speed when new parts come out? Yeah, no.