
Gaming tablets have always been stuck in an awkward spot between portability and raw power. The ones fast enough to handle demanding titles tend to be bulky and heavy, more like a compact laptop than a true handheld. And smaller tablets, for a long time, simply didn’t have the hardware to keep serious players happy, leaving enthusiasts perpetually torn between convenience and performance.
Lenovo’s Legion Tab Gen 5 is the latest attempt to close that gap, and it’s making a convincing case. The 8.8-inch Android gaming tablet packs specs that could make larger competitors nervous, all within a frame light enough to slip into a backpack. First unveiled at MWC Barcelona and now available in the US, it starts at $849.99, a price that signals just how seriously Lenovo is treating this space.
Designer: Lenovo

Under the hood sits Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, the same chip you’d find in today’s flagship smartphones. The base model pairs it with 12 GB of LPDDR5T RAM and 256 GB of UFS 4.1 Pro storage, though it’s configurable up to 16 GB RAM and 512 GB storage. Lenovo’s AI Engine+ also runs in the background, dynamically optimizing frame rates, touch response, and haptic feedback as you play.
The screen all those frames render onto is equally impressive. Lenovo’s 8.8-inch PureSight Display runs at a 3K resolution of 3,040 × 1,904 pixels with a 165Hz refresh rate, covering 99% of the DCI-P3 color space with Dolby Vision support. Touch sampling reaches up to 480Hz, so inputs register almost instantly during a competitive match. TÜV Flicker Free and Low Blue Light certifications make extended sessions considerably easier on the eyes.

One of the most remarkable things about this tablet isn’t the chip or the display, it’s what’s powering everything. Lenovo managed to pack a 9,000 mAh battery into this 8.8-inch body, a significant leap over the previous generation, while keeping the whole package at just 360 grams. Add 68W fast charging and bypass charging support, which prevents battery degradation during extended sessions, and running this thing dry becomes genuinely difficult.


The audio hasn’t been shortchanged either. Dual superlinear 2712 speakers with Dolby Atmos certification handle the sound, backed by dual microphones, so voice chat holds its own during any session. Three color options are available: Eclipse Black, Glacier White, and a vibrant Surge green that was originally introduced as a FIFA edition. An RGB accent on the back adds a dose of personality without making the whole thing look gaudy.

At $849.99 starting, the Legion Tab Gen 5 is anything but an impulse buy for the base 12 GB RAM and 256 GB storage configuration. That’s a $300 jump over its predecessor, a hike partly blamed on the rising cost of memory, perhaps an indicator of things to come. There’s also no word yet on the accessories designed for its Chinese counterpart, which would probably help increase this pricey gaming tablet’s appeal.