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Review: Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x Copilot+ PC

It’s a bit plain, but dollar for dollar, this Lenovo PC has the best price-to-performance ratio.
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Photograph: Christopher Null; Getty Images
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Rating:

7/10

WIRED
Unbeatable performance for the price. Outstanding screen. Great battery life.
TIRED
Loud fan. Sleepy design. Attracts oily smudges from fingers.

Like HP before it, Lenovo targets the corner office—or at least the cubicle—with its interpretation of Microsoft’s Copilot+ PC concept. These computers are powered by Qualcomm chipsets based on ARM architecture, a breakaway from the traditional Intel-based laptops of old. They've been promising big battery gains, performance enhancements, and artificial intelligence tricks.

The Yoga Slim 7x hardware is as tame as they come, a no-nonsense aluminum shell decked out in ThinkPad so-blue-it’s-black paint and largely devoid of frills. A small tab above the screen serves as a place for the webcam to live and provides a way to more easily open the clamshell, and a speaker flanks the height of the keyboard on each side.

Photograph: Christopher Null

I mention these things because if I didn’t, I don’t know what else I’d say about the design of the laptop—14.5-inch screen, 2.8 pounds, 18 mm thick—which is otherwise about as Lenovo as a Lenovo can be. One point worth noting: The paint job tends to attract oily fingerprints with surprising ease, and I found myself constantly wiping down the chassis to clean it.

Under the hood, the Yoga Slim 7x offers entry-level specs, with a Snapdragon X Elite X1E78100 CPU backed up by 16 GB of RAM and a 512-GB solid-state drive. The touchscreen is the real standout here, providing a resolution of 2,944 x 1,840 pixels and pouring on the brightness. Short of the Microsoft Surface Pro, it’s the brightest Copilot+ PC I’ve tested to date and one of the brightest laptops I’ve seen overall.

Port selection is curious but probably good enough for most users: three USB-C ports, all supporting USB 4.0. You’ll need one for charging. On the right side of the laptop, you’ll also find a privacy shutter for the webcam. This is perhaps the least intuitive place for such a switch, but I suppose it’s better to have it here than not at all.

Photograph: Christopher Null

Performance is strictly middle-of-the-road, and the Yoga Slim 7x turned in average scores among the five Copilot+ PCs I’ve tested to date, on both general CPU-intensive applications and graphics-heavy tests, though I did achieve an oddly outlying high score on the Cinebench 2024 image-rendering benchmark I couldn’t readily explain. A curious result, but I won’t shrug at unexpectedly great performance, however fleeting it is.

At the risk of repeating myself yet again, remember that Snapdragon-based computers still have compatibility issues and won’t run every app; if you need the basics—web browser, Microsoft Office, Minesweeper—this won’t be a big deal, but power users are already running into roadblocks with some of their most essential pieces of software.

The laptop’s battery life, in keeping with other Copilot+ PC units, is exemplary. Its score of 15 hours and 36 minutes on a full-screen YouTube test was second only to the Surface Pro’s 17 hours and 20 minutes, and just ahead of the 15 hours I achieved on the HP EliteBook Ultra G1q. Audio quality is fine but short of stellar; in a larger room, it won’t be sufficient for movie night.

The hands-on experience with the laptop is solid. The 14.5-inch screen is an oddball size, but it gives the laptop a bit more roominess without feeling overly large. The keyboard has that classic Lenovo snap, with well-spaced keys and a light powder coating on the keycaps that gives them a pleasant feel on the fingertips. The touchpad is spacious without being garishly large, and I rarely hit it with a palm while typing.

Photograph: Christopher Null

There is one downside to the Slim 7x, and it’s kind of a big one: The fan runs even under moderate loads, and it’s loud—by far the loudest Copilot+ PC I’ve tested to date. The new Snapdragon chipset is supposed to veritably sip power, which is why it enables such impressive battery life, so a bruisingly loud fan is a surprise here. It’s an unfortunate eyesore (earsore?) in what is otherwise an impressive package.

Making up for that and any other defects is the price. At $1,200, the Yoga Slim 7x is the cheapest of the Copilot+ PCs I’ve tested to date, and dollar for dollar it’s got the best price-to-performance ratio of any of the lot, regardless of what metric you’re looking at (raw performance or battery life). If you’re seeking a flashy, head-turning experience, best-in-class power, or room-filling multimedia system, this probably isn't your best choice. But if you want an all-around solid utility player at a reasonable price (and you’re sold on Snapdragon), you can’t go wrong.