The title of the series speaks for itself. These are high-performance image laptops and ultrabooks, which, thanks to the touch-sensitive rotary screen, turn into full-fledged tablets. Most Yoga models look extremely sophisticated, assembled conscientiously and stuffed to the most I don't want.

The characteristic features of this line are a thin and lightweight premium aluminium case and a high-end touchscreen display. In simpler models, IPS matrices with Full HD resolution and 100% coverage of the sRGB colour space are most often used, 4K and support for HDR content are added more expensively in laptops.


The hardware configuration is usually above average, but without claims to supersonic speed. Cheaper models run on Core i5 with 8 GB of RAM, older versions are equipped with Core i7 and 16 GB of RAM. Video cards are most often either embedded or discrete, but cold and low-power. Of the things useful in everyday life, it is worth highlighting the built-in Dolby Atmos acoustics, fast charging, stylus support (in touch-screen models), Wi-Fi 6 and USB-C ports with Thunderbolt.

Considering that expensive ultrabooks transformers are still a niche product, Lenovo has expanded its range and recently in the ranks of Yoga you can also find mid-level models with rotary displays. Even more confusing are the maps of the Yoga Slim model without touch displays. That is, these are ordinary ultrabooks that fit into the yoga concept only due to their thickness, weight and traditionally rich equipment.