I can see it appealing to a
very niche market of people who simply must play their favorite games on crowded trains, in the bathroom, on elevators, while in a queue at the bank, and other venues where hand-top gaming is the only answer. The rest of us will still prefer a mouse and keyboard since for most traditional games a touchscreen won't really cut it, no matter how sensitive - and in the meantime simply use our already-touchscreened phones to play minigames.
It does have some nice features, though, and I wouldn't mind seeing a similar, full-size gaming keyboard appear for desktop users...
Check out the latest piece of cutting edge hardware Intel has to offer.
You mean Razer, not Intel. They are using Intel's Atom processor, but the device was developed by Razer themselves, a gaming peripherals company.