User blog comment:O Raz3r O/My Ranking of the 12 UK Series/@comment-2118191-20180912152724/@comment-9751413-20180912154111

I'm not too sure. Going out inconspicuously like it did does mean that the robot could be retired still looking like it always did, sleek and mean. Carbide would have just simply torn it a new one, meaning the last thing we ever saw of Razer was it being dumped into the pit as a damaged wreck of metal. Going out like it did was both hilarious and ironic, while allowing it to be retired in one piece. Razer will never be thought of as a badly damaged robot (Remember Chaos 2's farewell?) and can be retired as a flawless museum piece. Avoiding Carbide was one of the best things that could have ever happened to Razer.