This review first appeared in issue 360 of PC Pro.
While HPâs Elite x360 2-in-1 laptop would wear a bowler hat if it could, the Yoga 9i is a free spirit. It wants you to make art not presentations, to view films not spreadsheets, to sit in cafĂ©s not end-of-quarter sales meetings. Thatâs not to say it canât look serious â if anything, the slim, dark blue metal chassis could be a funkier color â but it essentially screams entertainment.
Letâs start with the 14in OLED panel. While it peaked at a modest 402cd/m2 in our SDR tests, its VESA TrueBlack 500 certification shows in punchy colors when watching films or playing games. It covers 119% of the DCI-P3 gamut and you can trust its colors, too, with an average Delta E of 0.45. The native color temperature is a fraction warm, so whites arenât as blazing as I like when typing in Word, but a density of 242ppi thanks to its 2,880 x 1,800 resolution makes the edges of text look razor sharp.
Lenovo includes its Slim Pen stylus, which magnetically attaches to the top of the lid. I love the firmness of the connection, but it doesnât charge at the same time; thereâs a USB-C slot at the top of the pen. As ever when using a plastic tip on a glass surface you canât expect a paper-like experience, but digital artists will appreciate the minimal 18ms lag, and the Smart Notes app is great for scribbles and sketches. At 1.3kg this isnât an iPad rival, but I was happy holding it in the crook of my arm while doodling.
The keyboard is no ThinkPad in terms of âfeelâ, but thereâs a generous 1.5mm of travel and the keys are large and easy to hit. Lenovo adds a bunch of shortcut keys on the right-hand side: eye-care mode, mute, a shortcut to its useful Vantage app for controlling settings, and a performance mode switcher.
During benchmarking I opted for Lenovoâs high-performance mode, but donât get too excited.
Intelâs Core Ultra 7 155H is a fine processor, but the Geekbench 6 scores printed below wonât concern AMD or Qualcomm, while its PCMark 10 score of 6,392 is strong but not incredible. Likewise a multicore result of 816 in Cinebench 2024.
Where Intelâs chip continues to beat Qualcomm is gaming, and there is potential here: 41fps in Dirt 5 at 1200p is a respectable return, as is 30fps at the screenâs native resolution, but youâll need to find less demanding titles to benefit from the panelâs 120Hz refresh rate. I thoroughly enjoyed Dirt 5âs pumping soundtrack through the Yogaâs speakers, though, with far more bass than Iâm used to from laptops. Thatâs thanks to a pair of 2W woofers in the base.
Unlike the ThinkPad T14s (see p56), the Yoga 9i isnât designed for easy maintenance. The difficulty isnât so much in getting inside the chassis â four Torx T5 screws offer little resistance â as what you can do once youâre there. Itâs good to see QR codes to help identify components, but I would only feel confident replacing the M.2 SSD â a scorching 1TB unit that returned 6,197MB/sec sequential reads â and the 75Wh battery.
Two months ago, I would have been full of praise about this laptopâs battery life: 12hrs 40mins under light use is a fine result. Or it was, until Snapdragon-based chips almost doubled my expectations. Still, thatâs enough to mean you donât need to sling the 65W charger into your bag on the daily commute, and it recharges speedily: 41% in half an hour, 75% after an hour.
Lenovo is throwing in a couple of sweeteners. Use the part code 83AC000FUK and youâll receive a swanky cover â complete with a loop for the stylus â and a three-in-one USB-C hub that adds USB-A, VGA and HDMI. These complement the three USB-C ports and one USB-A port tucked into the laptopâs narrow base (thereâs a 3.5mm headphone jack, too). Itâs a shame the hub doesnât include an RJ45 port, and while Iâm wishing it would also have been nice to see Wi-Fi 7 rather than Wi-Fi 6E. You can configure the Yoga 9i 2-in-1 Gen 9 on Lenovoâs website, with options such as 32GB of RAM, a higher-res screen and a grey finish rather than blue. But this pre-configured system is better value, especially as it was on sale for ÂŁ1,500, a ÂŁ200 discount, at the time of going to press. Still, Iâm not convinced thatâs bargain enough. Despite all the quality on show, the price feels like it should be closer to ÂŁ1,300 to compete with the deluge of laptops currently appearing on shelves.
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