The Lenovo Legion Pro 5 Gen 10 is positioned as Lenovo’s mainstream “Pro” gaming laptop for users who want strong performance without jumping all the way to the Legion 7 series. Our configuration comes with an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti Laptop GPU, 16-inch 2560×1600 display, and fast DDR5 memory. By just looking at the specs, it clearly targets gamers, content creators, and power users.

On paper, this is one of the more powerful combinations you can get in a 16-inch gaming laptop today. The Legion Pro 5 stands out as a well-rounded machine with a few expected trade-offs.
Design: Clean, Functional, and a Bit on the Heavy Side

The Legion Pro 5 uses the familiar Legion design language but there were some changes including a middle Legion logo instead of the side ones. The chassis has a simple, matte finish with subtle branding and an extended rear section where many of the ports and exhaust vents are placed. It does not scream gaming in the same way as some RGB-heavy competitors, which makes it more acceptable in classrooms or offices but at the same time, the Legion Pro 5 looks solid and comes with serious power inside.

The hinge is pushed slightly forward, leaving a “spine” at the back while the ports are housed on the side off the laptop. On the left, it comes with the power jack connector, HDMI, USB-PD, Thunderbolt port and USB-A port. While on the other side, there’s the audio jack, 2x USB-A, camera control, and a LAN port. The lid feels sturdy, and there is minimal flex on the keyboard deck. Overall, the Legion Pro 5 does have a solid build that feels sturdy.


The Legion Pro 5 chassis offers great performance and a solid build, but the chassis is a bit heavy compared to some laptops. Nonetheless, the Legion Pro 5 configuration is a powerhouse with strong build quality. It’s definitely made for people who are looking for more power in their daily driver.

This means the Legion Pro 5 feels more like a portable desktop replacement than a portable laptop. It is easy enough to bring between rooms or to school with a desktop power, but it is not the lightest 16-inch laptop.

Keyboard and touchpad: Comfortable for Gaming and Long Typing

The Legion Pro 5 continues one of Lenovo’s biggest strengths, the keyboard. The TrueStrike keyboard provides a comfortable balance of travel and feedback. The keys are slightly soft on impact but still feel responsive, which is good for both gaming and typing.

In everyday usage, you can easily navigate Windows, browse the web, and edit documents with just the trackpad. For gaming, most users will still plug in an external mouse, but it’s good to know that the built-in trackpad is not a weak spot.

Nonetheless, I do love the full sized arrow keys on it which is perfect for gaming along with the number pad as well. And the spacing between the keys? They were great as well. The RGB keyboard is bright enough for low-light gaming but not overly aggressive which I truly appreciate.

The Legion Pro 5 ships with Windows 11 and Lenovo’s own utilities such as Lenovo Vantage and Legion Space, which let you adjust performance profiles, customize the keyboard lighting. For day-to-day typing, writing, and working on documents, the keyboard feels reliable and familiar, especially if you’ve used other Lenovo laptops before.

As for the speakers on the Legion Pro 5, it is decent but not exceptional, which is expected on a laptop. Nonetheless, it would be more than enough if you want a portable gaming machine that you can bring anywhere.

Display: 16-inch 16:10 Panel That Balances Gaming and Productivity
The Legion Pro 5 ships with a 16-inch WQXGA (2560×1600) IPS panel with a 240Hz high refresh rate. There’s a 16:10 aspect ratio as well that gives a bit more vertical space, which is very helpful for browsing, editing documents, and timelines in video-editing software.
The Legion Pro 5 comes with a good color reproduction, decent brightness, and a matte finish that helps reduce reflections. The refresh rate makes it appropriate for 1440p gaming. High-refresh gaming looks smooth, and the resolution is sharp enough for detailed content creation.
Performance: A powerful laptop

As for the benchmarks, we got the following scores:
Geekbench 6 – 3053 single-core / 19,423 multi-core
Cinebench R23 – 2,233 single-core / 34,719 multi-core
Geekbench 6 Compute (OpenCL) – 175,798
PCMark 10 – 8,240
3D Mark Steel Nomad: 3,904 points
3D Mark Steel Nomad Light: 19,614 points
3D Mark Speed Way: 4,904 points
These numbers place the Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX in the top tier of laptop CPUs, especially in multi-core workloads. The processor is well-suited for video editing, rendering, software development, and heavy multitasking.
The 2025 Legion Pro 5 with this combo handled the heating pretty well compared to some models. For users focused on the best CPU headroom available in this chassis, the Ultra 9 configuration along with its GPU is clearly at the top.
These scores also align with what we expect from a 140W-class RTX 5070 Ti Laptop GPU and confirm that this configuration is capable of high-refresh 1440p gaming.

In GTA V Enhanced at the highest settings, in-game benchmark shows an average FPS of around 135. While in Cyberpunk 2077 Ray Tracing: Overdrive (2560×1600, DLSS Quality) we got an average 44 FPS. For such a demanding workload, 44 FPS at native resolution with heavy ray tracing is expected. A few tweaks such as turning down some ray tracing options or using a more aggressive DLSS preset can push it closer to a 60 FPS target at 1440p

Looking at the monitoring graphs from 3DMark runs, the GPU clocks remain stable across long benchmark passes, while CPU clocks fluctuate but stay within expected ranges for an HX-class chip. The benchmarks suggest that the Legion Pro 5 is able to sustain high performance without heavy, continuous throttling. However, the fan noise is very noticeable.
Battery Life: Usable, But Not a Highlight
Lenovo equips the Legion laptop with a 80Wh battery. For light use (web browsing, documents, streaming), similar Legion models usually deliver around 4-5 hours depending on brightness and power profile. Heavier use or any gaming will drain the battery much faster.
If you plan to game or render, you should still treat the Legion Pro 5 as a machine that’s mostly used plugged in.
Verdict: A Strong 16-inch Gaming laptop, a desktop replacement

The Lenovo Legion Pro 5 with Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX and RTX 5070 Ti Laptop GPU is a powerful and well-balanced gaming laptop. Benchmarks confirm that CPU and GPU performance are in the upper tier for a 16-inch machine, and the Legion Pro 5 family delivers excellent performance, a great keyboard, and a solid display, with the main compromises being weight, average battery life, and some heat and fan noise under load.

Who is it for? It’s definitely for the gamers who want smooth 1440p gaming with ray tracing options on their laptop and also for content creators and students who need strong CPU and GPU performance for editing, rendering, and heavy multitasking.
Overall, the Legion Pro 5 is a very capable performance laptop that lives up to the Legion reputation. If you’re primarily gaming or doing heavy work plugged in and you like Lenovo’s design and keyboard, this configuration with Core Ultra 9 and RTX 5070 Ti is a strong option for 2025 especially if you are looking for a desktop replacement.




