![]() Suffice to say, I believe you would have a great time playing any games on the Legion 5 Pro. This unit can only go up to a 165Hz refresh rate Personally, the high-quality graphics setting was good enough for me. Case in point, the Legion 5 Pro actually kind of struggled when I turned on the HD Texture and switched to max settings in Far Cry 6. But if you want to maximise everything, the laptop would have some trouble running it. It can obviously play games in high-quality graphics settings. That said, the i7-12700H processor + RTX 3060 GPU combination has a bit of limitation. Also, needless to say, this laptop can tackle most of the graphics-intensive video games currently on the market. Like its other higher variant, you should be able to top up for more memory. The Legion 5 Pro I reviewed features a 12th Gen Intel Core i7-12700H processor, 16GB of RAM, a massive 2TB SSD, and an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 GPU. New Legion Spectrum section for you to customise your own RGB pattern Other than that, the features on the Vantage app are just like the typical ones in every other gaming centre program. You can configure up to three RGB profiles with different lighting options, so that’s nice. The app is still the same, albeit with the new Legion Spectrum section for you RGB lovers. Oh, since it has 4-Zone RGB support now, you can customise the colours in its native Lenovo Vantage app. The Legion 5 Pro may still be a laptop, but I don’t find it that convenient to bring around and work on a couch because of how large and heavy it is. But it’s great that the I/O ports remain the same as before, with most of them located behind for easier cable management. ![]() To be frank, there isn’t much to talk about the design. Also, the Legion logo on the lid was changed into text form. If anything, the only change it got this year was a 4-zone RGB backlit keyboard instead of the single white backlighting. It still has the same 16-inch display with the 16:10 aspect ratio, the same keyboard layout, and everything else. Like last year’s model, the Legion 5 Pro is as big and heavy as before. To learn more about the features and performance, check out my Lenovo Legion 5 Pro (2022) review below. Since there’s no official price tag, I’m guessing it could be easily over RM6-RM7K, depending on the variant. Nevertheless, both variants should be more or less the same as both are using the latest 12th Gen Intel Core processors. In the official online store, the closest one I can find uses an RTX 3070 GPU, but mine was an RTX 3060 GPU. However, the Legion variant I reviewed is somewhat unavailable in Malaysia. The Lenovo Legion 5 Pro last year was one of my favourite gaming laptops of 2021, so I was quite excited to review it again this year.
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