Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Evergreens

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

IdeaPad vs. Yoga vs. Slim vs. ThinkPad vs. ThinkBook vs. Legion: Lenovo brands, explained

Add as a preferred source on Google

Lenovo has one of the widest ranges of laptops around, rivaling Dell and HP in everything from budget machines to exotic gaming laptops. Choosing from such a variety can be a challenge, with a great deal of overlap between lines that can blur the distinction between individual models.

To help make your decision easier, we’ve broken down Lenovo’s lineup including everything from the budget and midrange IdeaPad to the business-oriented ThinkPad and the Legion gaming series. Chances are, you can find what you’re looking for from one of these lines.

Recommended Videos

IdeaPad

Mark Coppock/Digital Trends

The IdeaPad is Lenovo’s budget and midrange consumer line, offering a wide variety of affordable and well-built laptops to fit the needs of most users. The line ranges from the $230 with an 11.6-inch 16:9 Full HD (1920 x 1080) IPS display and an AMD Athlon Silver 3050e CPU up to the $1,450 Buy at Amazon with a 16-inch 16:10 WQXGA (2560 x 1600) IPS display and an AMD Ryzen 7 5800H CPU.

Intel’s 12th-generation CPU lineup is available as you move up in price, and AMD’s Ryzen 6000 lineup also makes an appearance. You’ll also find discrete GPUs up to the Nvidia RTX 3050 Ti.

IdeaPad construction ranges from an all-plastic to an all-metal chassis, with a variety of color schemes and aesthetic designs. The IdeaPad line includes clamshell laptops like the , 360-degree convertible 2-in-1s where the display flips all the way around, such as the IdeaPad Flex 5i, and entry-level gaming laptops like the .

Shop carefully and you can find high-quality displays with solid colors, brightness, and contrast, plus build quality, keyboards, and touchpads that rival premium laptops. The IdeaPad line overlaps a bit with the premium Yoga lineup below while providing attractive budget options at the very low end.

Yoga

Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 Gen 7 laptop sits on a small desk folded like a tent.
Mark Coppock/Digital Trends

The Yoga is Lenovo’s premium consumer convertible 2-in-1 lineup, meaning these are laptops with 360-degree hinges and touchscreens. Currently, they’re comprised of several models including the Yoga 6, the Yoga 7i, and the Yoga 9i. Each model plays a particular role within the line.

The  is the smallest with 13.3-inch displays, and it’s the least expensive. It’s also AMD-only, currently offering the AMD Ryzen 5000 series, specifically the Ryzen 5 5500U and the Ryzen 7 5700U. You get Radeon graphics, up to 16GB of RAM, up to a 1TB solid-state drive (SSD), and a 13.3-inch 16:10 WUXGA (1920 x 1200) IPS touch display. The Yoga 6 features an all-metal chassis with an optional fabric top cover, coming in at 0.68 inches thick and weighing 3.02 pounds. It’s priced from $675 to $1,100 depending on the configuration.

The Yoga 7i sits in the middle of the Yoga line. It offers a high-quality build and, with the 14-inch and 16-inch models, a gorgeous new aesthetic with rounded edges that makes it one of the best-designed convertible 2-in-1s around. You can get a Yoga 7i in one of three sizes — 14 inches, 15 inches, and 16 inches — with the 15-inch model being a generation behind.

The Yoga 9i sits at the top of the lineup, offering a unique 2-in-1 design with a soundbar integral to the 360-degree hinge that blasts audio in whatever the laptop’s orientation. It’s incredibly well-built and offers a stunning 14-inch 16:10 OLED display at WQHD+ (2880 x 1800) resolution. It competes strongly with the best 2-in-1s on the market.

The Yoga line offers Lenovo’s best consumer build quality and innovation. You’ll find lovely designs, excellent performance and battery life, and class-leading privacy and security features in Lenovo Yoga machines.

Slim

Lenovo Slim 9i Gen 7 front view.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Slim is Lenovo’s premium line of clamshell laptops. It’s a little confusing because you’ll find models labeled as “IdeaPad Slim.” We’re talking here about the Slim 7 and Slim 9 that serve the same audience as the Yoga line, only without the 2-in-1 flexibility.

The Slim 7 comes in a few flavors, including Intel and AMD versions and 13.3-inch, 14-inch, and 16-inch varieties. The lowest price you’ll find is the $1,300 with a Core i7-1260P and a 13.3-inch WQXGA IPS display. At the high end is the $1,640 , with a 45-watt Intel Core i7-12700H, an Intel Arc A370M GPU, and a 16-inch 2.5K (2560 x 1600) IPS 120Hz display.

The Slim 9 is the highest-end Slim laptop, with the same rounded design as the $2,070 . It sports an Intel Core i7-1280P CPU and a 14-inch WQUXGA (3840 x 2400) OLED display, with 32GB of RAM and either a 512GB or 1GB SSD.

ThinkPad

Mark Coppock/Digital Trends / Digital Trends

The ThinkPad line was inherited from IBM, and Lenovo has maintained the line’s iconic look and feel, sturdy design, and business features. It’s also a massive lineup with 347 models currently listed at Lenovo.com, ranging from the $569 at the low end to the $4,175 at the high end.

The ThinkPad line is full of excellent machines, many of which have shown up on our best business laptops list. The ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 10, for example, is an excellent 14-inch business laptop that offers a sturdy, thin, and light chassis with solid performance and battery life. The ThinkPad X13s is a recent laptop that leverages Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 ARM CPU for great battery life in a diminutive chassis. The ThinkPad is known for its all-black chassis with red accents, excellent keyboard, touchpad, and TrackPoint, and solid business features.

Fortunately, the ThinkPad line is broken up into easily digested pieces:

  • C Series: ThinkPads running Google’s Chrome OS, specifically the $1,019 .
  • L Series: These are entry-level business machines. Prices range from the $571 to the $2,010 with Intel inside.
  • X Series: These are the smallest ThinkPads, including machines like the ThinkPad X12 Detachable and the ThinkPad X13s.
  • T Series: With workhorse laptops with simpler designs and high performance, the T Series has a wide range of machines, starting with the $755 up to the $3,999 .
  • Z Series: This is the newest ThinkPad line that’s aimed at sustainability via recyclable materials. The Z Series has two models, the starting at $1,355 and the starting at $1,975.
  • E Series: As ThinkPad’s more affordable lineup, it starts with the ThinkPad E15 Gen 4 (AMD) mentioned above, which is the least expensive ThinkPad, and ranges up to the $1,000 version.
  • P Series: This is ThinkPad’s workstation lineup aimed at scientific, engineering, and creative users. The P Series utilizes the fastest Intel 12th-gen 45-watt Core CPUs like the Core i9-12900HX and professional-level GPUs like the Nvidia RTX A5500. The entry-level ThinkPad workstation is the (AMD) at $1,319 and the line tops out at the $5,059 .
  • X1 Series: The ThinkPad’s ultra-premium lineup with both clamshell and 2-in-1 form factors has standout machines that include the ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 10 mentioned above and the ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 7. ThinkPad X1 prices start at $949 for the and max out at the $2,513 .

Navigating your way through the ThinkPad lineup can be a challenge, but suffice it to say that if you do your research, you’ll find a business-class laptop that will accomplish every possible objective. There are few manufacturers that offer a business laptop lineup that’s so diverse.

ThinkBook

The e-ink display on the Lenovo ThinkBook Plus Gen 2.
Mark Coppock/Digital Trends

The ThinkBook line is Lenovo’s nod to the small business. It offers features that businesspeople will appreciate, like solid build qualities, privacy and security, and innovative features. Speaking of the latter, the ThinkBook platform hosts a couple of unique models in the ThinkBook Plus Gen 2 with an e-ink screen on the lid and the ThinkBook Plus Gen 3 with a large second screen to the right of the keyboard.

Otherwise, ThinkBooks are well-designed laptops with top performance and battery life and outstanding connectivity. The line ranges in price from the $842 to the $2,609 ThinkBook Plus Gen 2. You can choose between Intel 12th-gen and AMD Ryzen 6000 CPUs, and display options range from Full HD up to UHD+.

Most ThinkBook models are clamshell laptops, but the line does include a couple of convertible 2-in-1s. The ThinkBook Plus Gen 2 is one, of course, and the other is the $1,400 . If you’re a business person who wants the right business features but doesn’t need enterprise security and management, then the ThinkBook line is a great option.

Legion

The Lenovo Legion 5i Pro sitting at an angle.
Mark Coppock/Digital Trends / Digital Trends

Finally, Lenovo has its Legion line of gaming laptops. The company’s least expensive gaming machines fall in the IdeaPad line, and so Legion starts at midrange and goes up from there. The line is a mix of conservatively designed, thin, and light gaming laptops and machines with more of a gaming aesthetic — although Lenovo avoids creating the kind of extravagant designs as some other gaming laptop makers.

The entry-level is represented by the $1,100 with an AMD Ryzen 5 CPU and RTX 3050 GPU, which is equipped to run modern titles at 1080p and medium graphics. At the high end is the $4,120 with an Intel Core i9-12900HX and an RTX 3080 Ti that’s more than capable of running games at 4K resolutions and high graphics.

Mixed in the lineup is the full range of Intel and AMD CPUs and Nvidia GPUs, with displays sporting high refresh rates at 165Hz and higher. We’ve found Lenovo’s Legion lineup of gaming laptops to be quite competitive with the rest of the field.

Mark Coppock
Former Computing Writer
Mark Coppock is a Freelance Writer at Digital Trends covering primarily laptop and other computing technologies. He has…
I spent a fortune on a Copilot+ PC, and I’ve barely ever touched Microsoft’s AI
Microsoft needs to give Copilot+ PC owners a reason to use Copilot
Copilot

There is a dedicated Copilot key on my ASUS Zenbook 14 OLED. Months after buying the laptop, it may be one of the least important keys on the entire keyboard. My Zenbook UM3406 runs on AMD’s Ryzen AI 300 series processor, complete with a dedicated NPU offering up to 50 TOPS of AI performance. That qualifies it as a Copilot+ PC, which makes it a part of what Microsoft once described as the new era for Windows.

AI is already a regular part of my workday. I use it for research, brainstorming, and working through ideas. But rather than relying on something built into the Windows OS, I've relied on the likes of ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini.

Read more
I bought into a brighter future, but my digital life bills monthly subscriptions
My day runs on streaming, cloud storage, AI, transport, and smart devices. None of it feels expensive until I realize almost nothing is ever fully paid for
Light, Adult, Female

Before I’ve properly started the day, several companies have already clocked in. Spotify or YouTube Premium handles the music, Google One keeps my files available, and an AI subscription is waiting in another tab to help me work faster.

Most of these charges earn their place. They save time, remove friction, and keep the day moving. I barely notice them until I think about what would stop working if one payment didn’t go through.

Read more
What happens when AI detectors fail? Researchers say we must be trained to spot fake AI faces
Researchers say spotting AI faces may soon depend more on people than software
Zuckerberg Deepfake

Artificial intelligence has become remarkably good at creating fake human faces. So good, in fact, that the old tricks people relied on - counting fingers, spotting warped earrings, or looking for distorted backgrounds - are quickly becoming obsolete. According to a new study highlighted by the BBC, the next line of defence may not be a better AI detector at all. It might simply be a better-trained human.

Researchers from the University of Aberdeen, working alongside Australia's National University, found that people can dramatically improve their ability to distinguish AI-generated faces from real ones after a relatively short period of structured training. Instead of hunting for obvious visual glitches, participants were taught to recognise subtle patterns that modern image generators still struggle to replicate consistently.

Read more