Skip to main content

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

Lenovo Slim 7i Pro X hands-on review: A do-it-all laptop

When you’re looking for a new laptop, you might be after a device that does something very specific. You might want something for video editing, light gaming, and day-to-day work or video conferencing.

The great thing about the PC industry is that there are tons of laptops for each of those end-use cases, but Lenovo might have just made a laptop that combines everything we just mentioned and some more.

Enter the Slim 7i Pro X. This new clamshell laptop aims to provide the power to create from anywhere, with a ton of raw performance and also an excellent design. I got to try one out ahead of release, and I think this has the potential to be your newest do-it-all laptop.

The Lenovo Slim 7i Pro on a table.
Arif Bacchus/ Digital Trends

Specs

  Lenovo Slim 7i Pro X
Dimensions 12.92 x 8.72 x 0.63 inches
Weight 3.48 pounds
Processor Intel Core i7-12700H/ Intel Core i7-12650H/Intel Core i5-12500H
Graphics GeForce RTX 3050 4GB GDDR6/GeForce GTX 1650 4GB GDDR6/ Intel Iris Xe
RAM 16GB/ 32GB LPDDR5 Dual Channel RAM
Display  14.5-inch 3K IPS (3072 x 1920) Glass, 120Hz refresh rate, 16:10 Aspect Ratio
Storage 512GB or 1TB PCIe Gen 4 m.2 SSD
Touch Included on some models
Ports 2 x Thunderbolt 4 ports, 1 x USB-A Port, 1x Audio Combo Jack, 1x HDMI 2.0 port
Wireless Wi-Fi 6 and 6E, Bluetooth 5.1
Webcam 1080p Windows Hello Webcam with electronic camera shutter
Operating system Windows 11 Home
Battery 70Wh, video playback up to 12.5 hours
Price, availability $1,699, June 2022

Design

The Lenovo Slim 7i Pro X's side profile.
Arif Bacchus/ Digital Trends

The new Lenovo Slim 7i Pro X brings some of the design elements from the Yoga 9i 2-in-1 down to a clamshell laptop. While most laptops are squared off or have a slopped look (where it’s thick in the back and slim upfront,) the Slim 7i Pro X felt a little different when I first touched it.

This laptop has a uniform design where the thickness is the same on all edges. It sports Lenovo’s “Comfort Edge” design language, where the corners are rounded off and smooth. This is so that when you go to type or rest your hands on the device, you won’t get “poked” with a jarring sharp edge. This design is not as shiny and extravagant as the Yoga 9i is, but it still looks great.

The top lid of the Slim 7i Pro X.
Arif Bacchus/ Digital Trends

The Cloud Gray color option I was hands-on with wasn’t too overly fancy or as striking as other laptops that have Intel’s H-class processors inside. It is something that’s sure to blend in well in office and work environments.

Overall, for a laptop that Lenovo is aiming at creatives, this device is quite slim and light. It weighs in at close to 3.48 pounds and is 0.63 inches thick. That’s still less than most gaming laptops that have a dedicated GPU, like the Razer Blade 14. That device is 4.1 pounds and 0.66 inches thick.

Display

The Slim 7i Display in use with the settings open.
Jacob Roach/ Digital Trends

If you need a laptop that does it all, the display will have to do it all, too. Luckily, Lenovo has you covered with the Slim 7i Pro X. The model I was hands-on with had a 14.5-inch 3K resolution (3072 x 1920) glass display. It was tuned to the 120Hz refresh rate and had a 16:10 aspect ratio. Other notable specs include the 400 nits of brightness, the display covering 100% of the sRGB color space, support for Nvidia G-Sync technology, and Windows 11’s adaptive refresh rates.

I wasn’t able to play any games on the laptop, and my hands-on time was mainly focused on watching videos and playing around with Windows 11. For these tasks, the 7i Pro X really seemed to shine. The 120Hz screen really brought Windows 11’s animations to life and made the operating system feel just as fluent as it is on a Surace Laptop Studio.

Additionally, when I went on YouTube to watch a video showcasing the colors of the rainbow, the reds, blues, greens, and yellows, really popped. I can tell why Lenovo claims this display has high color accuracy.

The display on the Slim 7i Pro X.
Arif Bacchus/ Digital Trends

I am really glad to see 120Hz panels move over from Lenovo’s Legion gaming lineup to consumer PCs, especially after Microsoft delivered it in the Surface Laptop Studio and Surface Pro 8. The 120Hz panels have huge benefits outside of gaming.

For people who will be using a laptop for web browsing, the 120Hz refresh rate will bring the web to life and make it feel smooth. For gaming, 120Hz might also make the action feel smooth in fast-paced games. And for video editing, the refresh rate should also make scrolling through video timelines a smoother and less daunting task.

Keyboard and trackpad

Hands on the keyboard of the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7 Pro X.
Jacob Roach/ Digital Trends

The keyboard and trackpad on the 7i Pro X feel a lot like it does on Lenovo’s non-Thinkpad devices. The layout offered plenty of room for my fingers to jam between keys as I speed type. Keycaps are also large, and the curved caps make it easy for my fingers to bounce between different letters. There’s definitely a lot of great travel and click here, but I still like the ThinkPad keyboards better.

As far as the trackpad, it is very large and centered exactly in the middle of the device. This means it is just within reach. Scrolling is smooth and accurate, and clicks on the corners are responsive. Lenovo always makes great trackpads, and the one on the 7i Pro X is no exception.

Ports, connectivity, webcam

The ports on the Slim 7i X Pro.
Jacob Roach/ Digital Trends

Lenovo might have been inspired by Apple with the 7i Pro X. The new laptop sports a good set of ports, which ensures you can do all that you need without dongles. Included in the mix are 2 Thunderbolt 4 ports, 1 USB Type-A Port, 1xAudio Combo Jack, and an HDMI 2.0 port. That’s a really nice mix, meaning you can easily hook up to external displays and connect USB drives without worry.

The webcam on the Lenovo Slim 7i Pro X.
Jacob Roach/ Digital Trends

As for the webcam, it is a 1080p Windows Hello webcam. There’s a dedicated webcam kill switch at the side of the laptop that can turn off the webcam and remove it from the device manager, so no one can spy on you. The quality of the webcam is great. When I turned it on, the colors in my shirt looked natural, even with a window and bright sunlight behind me. I can see this as a new video conferencing laptop if you want it for that.

Performance and battery life

The CPU on the Slim 7i laptop.
Arif Bacchus/ Digital Trends

The real do-it-all aspect of the Slim 7i Pro X is with is what is inside the device. The laptop comes equipped with Intel’s 12th generation H-series processors. Options include the Intel Core i7-12700H, the Intel Core i7-12650H, or Intel Core i5-12500H CPU. Over on the GPU side, you can choose either Intel’s integrated graphics or the GeForce RTX 3050 with 4GB GDDR6 memory and the GeForce GTX 1650 with 4GB GDDR6 memory.

Intel’s H-series laptop processors are the top of the top. The processors offer enthusiast-level performance, tuned to 45 watts. I was hands-on with the Core i7-12700H processor, which has six performance cores and eight efficiency cores, for 14 cores total. The unit also had the GeForce RTX 3050 inside.

Web browsing on the 7i Pro X laptop.
Arif Bacchus/ Digital Trends

I wasn’t able to play games or edit videos on the sample laptop I was hands-on with, but judging off the reviews of the Asus ROG Flow Z13, which has the same CPU and the exact same GPU as this Lenovo laptop, I fully expect it to perform just as well. Obviously, you might not be able to play hit games like Microsoft Flight Simulator at high settings, but for light gaming and on low settings, this laptop could do the trick.

Video editing should also be an easy task with the RTX graphics, and with web browsing, the H-series processor should not hold this laptop back at all. I really look forward to testing this laptop more in our labs.

Price and availability

The Lenovo Slim 7i Pro X with an Intel processor starts at $1,699. There’s also the Lenovo Slim 7 Pro X with AMD Ryzen 6000 Series processors, which starts at $1,499. Both have expected availability starting June 2022.

Lenovo Slim 7i Pro X 

Lenovo Slim 7 Pro X

Arif Bacchus
Arif Bacchus is a native New Yorker and a fan of all things technology. Arif works as a freelance writer at Digital Trends…
Acer Swift X 16 hands-on review: A tantalizing preview
An Acer Swift X 16 sits open on a coffee table.

I received a preproduction Acer Swift X 16 to look at, and it's driving me crazy. Why, you ask? Because Acer put a lid on benchmarking, meaning I can't run the Intel 12th-gen Core i7-1260P CPU and the Intel Arc graphics through our usual tests. I'm dying to see how they perform, and they're right there in front of me and yet entirely out of reach. That's OK, though. I can still give some impressions of the laptop's design in anticipation of its release in June 2022.

As a preproduction machine, all specifications are subject to change. I received a configuration with the Core i7, Intel Arc graphics, and a WQXGA (2,560 x 1,600) 16:10 IPS display that should cost $1,250 when released (with 16GB of RAM and 1TB of storage). That's a fair price for a beefy 16-inch laptop, and there's plenty to talk about even if I can't dig in the way I'd like.
Design

Read more
Lenovo ThinkPad X13s hands-on review: ARM-powered ThinkPad
thinkpad x13s hands on new specs price photos x13 gen 1 featured image

Lenovo's best laptops have always had Intel or AMD inside, but in a first, there's now a new ThinkPad powered by Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 compute platform.

More specifically, it is the ThinkPad X13s, an ARM-powered device that's unlike a regular ThinkPad in more ways than one. With promising always-on, always-connected performance and a fantastic sustainable design, this Lenovo laptop feels different from past Windows on ARM devices, and after trying one ahead of Mobile World Congress, it dares to take on Apple's M1 MacBooks in the business realm.

Read more
Lenovo IdeaPad Duet 5i hands-on: One-upping the Surface Pro
The Lenovo IdeaPad 5i tablet.

Microsoft's Surface Pro 8 might be the best Windows 2-in-1 you can buy, but companies like Lenovo are using the base design of the device to try new things with the form factor. The ThinkPad X12 detachable is a good example of this, but Lenovo is now going after the Surface again with the new IdeaPad Duet 5i.

I got to try it ahead of Mobile World Congress and quickly found out that this new Windows tablet can do one thing that a Surface Pro or Surface Go can't -- and it's all thanks to the keyboard.

Read more