Lenovo’s Legion 7a finally gets the RTX 5070 upgrade it always needed

Lenovo’s Legion 7a gets a welcome boost with GeForce RTX 5070 and 12GB VRAM

Lenovo has quietly refreshed its Legion 7a gaming laptop just a few months after its debut, adding a configuration that many buyers were waiting for. The updated model can now be equipped with NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 5070 12GB, bringing a welcome boost in both graphics performance and video memory.

When the Legion 7a first launched, it topped out with the GeForce RTX 5060, leaving it trailing its predecessor in certain gaming workloads. NVIDIA has since revised its laptop RTX 5070 lineup, effectively splitting it into two variants: the original 8GB model and a newer 12GB version. Lenovo is among the first manufacturers to offer the upgraded GPU in a shipping laptop.

The new RTX 5070 operates at up to 115W TGP with Dynamic Boost enabled, comfortably above NVIDIA's baseline power target. Combined with the expanded 12GB GDDR7 memory pool, the GPU should offer noticeably better performance in modern games, especially at higher settings where VRAM demands continue to increase. AI applications and ray tracing workloads also stand to benefit from the additional memory.

According to Lenovo's PSREF documentation, the Legion 7 16AGP11 with the RTX 5070 12GB is planned for a global release. However, there's one limitation: the GPU is only available alongside the Ryzen AI 9 HX 470 processor. Buyers opting for the Ryzen AI 7 450 will still be limited to the GeForce RTX 5060 configuration. At the time of writing, Lenovo has yet to list the updated model on its regional online stores.

 

As expected, the Legion 7a remains positioned as a premium gaming laptop, complete with high-end hardware and pricing to match. That said, shoppers looking purely for value may find alternatives worth considering. Lenovo's own Legion 7i, for example, pairs the same 12GB RTX 5070 with an Intel Core Ultra 9 290HX processor and can sometimes be found at a lower price depending on the market.

The move to 12GB of VRAM, achieved by switching from 2GB to 3GB GDDR7 memory chips, addresses one of the biggest criticisms surrounding NVIDIA's recent laptop GPUs. For years, gamers have argued that 8GB of VRAM is becoming increasingly restrictive in newer titles, particularly with ray tracing enabled. While it isn't a silver bullet, the extra memory should give these new RTX 5070 laptops a much better chance of staying relevant for years to come.

As always, for the latest news on gaming laptops, GPU launches, PC hardware, and developments across the gaming industry, be sure to follow our dedicated hardware coverage.

manhkbrady

manhkbrady

1079 Articles

A writer, and a full-time Tetris min-maxing player. Do you know that rhythm games are a form of human benchmarking?

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