You also don’t get a Thunderbolt 4 port, for that matter and essentially lose out on all the additional features Intel processors come with. The biggest bottleneck on this, as compared to Intel-powered machines is the lack of PCIe 4.0 lanes for the RTX 3070 GPU to take advantage of, the effect of which we will see play out in the gaming section. All this plays out on a 15.6-inch WQXGA IPS display with Dolby Vision support and 165Hz refresh rate, with the help of 16GB DDR4 memory and 1TB SSD storage. But for what it’s worth (Rs 1,79,999), you get a AMD Ryzen 7 5800H with 8 cores and 16 threads, paired to a 140W NVIDIA RTX 3070, with 16GB RAM and 1TB storage. Not much different from the RTX 3070 variant that’s available in India, except for a single-lit keyboard instead of four-zone RGB you get in the Indian variant. So the review unit we received from Lenovo was the Singapore variant. Here’s my review - Lenovo Legion 5 Pro: Specifications Not many will give you a 15-inch Dolby Vision display with a high-wattage RTX 3070, housed in a slick design, but that’s what Lenovo has managed to stuff inside the Legion 5 Pro, and in my books, that’s a lot more value for money than the 14-inch ROG Zephyrus G14. The beauty of this offering is that it’s priced just over Rs 1.5 lakhs, but packs so much more than what the competition offers.
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