Lenovo's mid-range gaming laptop brings all modern computer games smoothly onto the matte 120 Hz display (Full HD, IPS). At a price of about 800 Euros (~$907), it doesn't make that big of a dent in your wallet and can boast a good price-performance ratio. Good: The laptop has room for two NVMe SSDs.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Lenovo-IdeaPad-Gaming-3i-15IMH05-in-review-Core-i5-at-full-throttle.480784.0.html
The cost is about the same as Legion 5 (Ryzen 5 4600H, GTX 1650). IMO, Legion 5 is a better buy.
Exactly how does one relocate the retaining screw for the second SSD slot?
can you fit an m.2 nvme 2280 ssd on where the m.2 nvme 2242 ssd is located and still have a 2.5" sata drive?
Max ram admitted?
I have a question for anyone who use this laptop, I am the only 1 who have problem with Rainbow Six Siege? Dedicated GPU won't load and I tryed everything ... Every other game work fine
what is the purpose of the sticky light blue foam like tape that is sitting inside the lenovo case.
Hey, unfortunately a M.2 2230 SSD cannot be installed in the second M.2 slot. I just opened my laptop to measure it and between the connector and the screw there is about 23 mm clearance. I don't really know the purpose of the screw when it's located in this original position, only allowing the 2.5" tray?
does this computer worth 500$ used today in 2023?
the laptop will come with 16 ram instead of 8 and more ssd storge then what u checked.
if not, which laptop is the best for max 900$ today?
Ryzen processors run way too hot, I'd choose this never a Legion any day, and did. I've owned ryzen powered laptops, only trouble! Desktop ryzens are another thing completely.