Testseek.co.uk have collected 376 expert reviews of the Lenovo Legion 5 / 5i 15 - AMD CPU and the average rating is 82%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Lenovo Legion 5 / 5i 15 - AMD CPU.
July 2020
(82%)
376 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(85%)
1915 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
820100376
The editors liked
Strong all-round performance
Silky gaming on 165Hz FHD G-Sync display
Decent build quality and excellent keyboard
Impressive specification for £1
300
Eight-hour battery life
Copes with the best games
Keeps itself very cool
Lots of bang for your buck
Well built
Practical design and clean darkgray looks
Types well
Even with the rather mushy feedback
300nits 100% sRGB panel options
Including 144 Hz
Excellent performance is CPUheavy loads
Highly configurable and easy to upgrade
Excellent thermal
Sturdy build quality and made out of materials that should age well
Balanced IPS screen
With 180 angle
MUX and GSync
Good inputs for this class
Excellent performance across the board
And a wellbalanced Quiet profile
Easily serviceable and upgradeab
Great build quality
Good keyboard and trackpad
Good screen
Nice CPU performance and alright GPU
Lots of upgrade options
Decent battery life
Especially if you can find an 80Whr model
Competitively priced
Great keyboard
Good upgrade options
Excellent gaming performance
The editors didn't like
Display lacks wow factor of Legion 5 Pro
Smaller trackpad (vs. Legion 5 Pro)
Fans get noisy quickly
Lacks keyboard lighting
Not the most powerful
The design is rather plain
The rubbery coating seems to chip and dent easily
No cardreader or USBC charging
Only tops at a 1650Ti GPU for now
So limited for gaming and GPUtasks
Expensive once specced up
At least for now
Fullsize laptop with a heavy 300W power brick in this configuration
Published: 2022-05-10, Author: David , review by: T3.com
Copes with the best games,Keeps itself very cool,Lots of bang for your buck,
Lacks keyboard lighting, Not the most powerful, The design is rather plain,
The Lenovo Legion 5 Advantage Edition is a mid-range gaming laptop with some top AMD components and a very attractive price attached. It's capable of handling every game out there, and doesn't do badly at all when you want to use your laptop for other stu...
sturdy build quality and made out of materials that should age well, balanced IPS screen, with 180 angle, MUX and GSync, good inputs for this class, excellent performance across the board, and a wellbalanced Quiet profile, easily serviceable and upgradeab
fullsize laptop with a heavy 300W power brick in this configuration, noisy fans on all power profiles, and always active even with light use, buggy wireless with the Realtek module, and buggy battery draw on Hybrid, tiny audio quality and poor camera
The Legion 5 is one of the best-value mid-tier laptops of this generation, and a recommendation in this 3060 configuration over here in Europe where it's also very aggressively priced. What you're getting here is rugged and reliable build quality, fair in...
Abstract: We’ve selected a winner and a runner-up across 26 different tech-related categories, and then crowned an overall Product of the Year that we feel marks a turning point for the industry.Welcome to the Expert Reviews Tech Product of the Year Awards 2021.If...
There's an awful lot to like about the Legion 5, especially with the spec included with this model I'm testing. You'll have to jump up to the Legion 5 Pro for a higher resolution screen, but I found the full HD panel quite adequate for gaming, video editi...
Great keyboard, Good upgrade options, Excellent gaming performance
Poor battery life, Loudspeakers lack bass
The new Legion 5 is yet another great option in this increasingly contested section of the laptop market. It's capable of better gaming performance than both the Acer Nitro 5 and the Asus TUF Dash F15 and it also comes within striking distance of the far...
great build quality, good keyboard and trackpad, good screen, nice CPU performance and alright GPU, lots of upgrade options, decent battery life, especially if you can find an 80Whr model, competitively priced
lousy webcam, subpar speakers
For a $1k laptop, this Lenovo Legion 5 is excellent. We were looking for a laptop with a powerful CPU, a decent GPU for the occasional content creating, and a good and accurate screen. This one here checks all those boxes and has some great other features...
Strong all-round performance, Silky gaming on 165Hz FHD G-Sync display, Decent build quality and excellent keyboard, Impressive specification for £1,300, Eight-hour battery life
Display lacks wow factor of Legion 5 Pro, Smaller trackpad (vs. Legion 5 Pro), Fans get noisy quickly
With the aim of cornering the gaming laptop market, Lenovo's Legion portfolio has evolved to offer compelling solutions at a variety of competitive price points.The recently reviewed Legion 5 Pro is, in our estimation, a stand-out choice at £1,500, an...
Abstract: If time has taught us anything, it should be that newer isn't necessarily better. In the world of computing, it often means paying a significant premium to be a hardware beta tester. By buying a used or refurbished laptop, you're not just paying a lot le...