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A few months ago, we tested the first Lenovo Legion Go S, Lenovo’s flagship PC gaming handheld revision. While it was notable as the first gaming handheld to use AMD's Ryzen Z2 processors (the ...
Powered by Valve's SteamOS—not Windows—the updated Legion Go S is a big improvement over the original and, frankly, a better SteamOS handheld than the actual Steam Deck.
The Lenovo Legion Go S is the latest version of the company's handheld gaming experience, with big potential for greatness and a few features holding it back.
The Lenovo Legion Go S debuts AMD's latest mobile gaming processor and boosts battery life over the past generation, but its performance ceiling is limited for the price.
The Legion Go S powered by SteamOS is available to pre-order now for $549.99, and will ship on May 25. The Ryzen Z1 Extreme model ships on the same date for $749.99.
The Legion Go S feels wonderful to game on and can churn out decent frame rates once you've tinkered with its BIOS settings, but it's using previous-gen internals that can't quite keep up.
The future of Windows game handhelds can't improve until Microsoft gets involved. Go with a Steam Deck, or wait for the SteamOS version of this handheld.
The Lenovo Legion Go S is an incredibly ergonomic handheld gaming PC that feels great in your hands, but Windows makes the whole experience feel awkward.
The Lenovo Legion Go S is a smaller handheld gaming PC, packed with an AMD Z2 Go APU, 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD. But can it keep up with the recent run of excellent gaming handhelds?
The Lenovo Legion Go S establishes Lenovo as a premier handheld manufacturer, but I'd recommend waiting for a better hardware configuration.
Gaming Lenovo Legion Go 2 Lenovo Legion Go 2 hands-on preview – the handheld of the future, but at what cost? The prototype shown off at CES showed promise in terms of both performance and comfort.