Lenovo’s updated Legion Pro 7i and 34WD-10 OLED monitor are finally released in Singapore

The new products join us six months after they were announced at CES 2025. Better late than never.

The refreshed Lenovo Legion Pro 7i was the most powerful Legion laptop showcased at CES back in January, and is now available in Singapore. Image: Lenovo.

Earlier at CES this year, Lenovo announced a slate of products that would form the Legion gaming brand’s 2025 lineup. This included laptops with refreshed components, upgraded PC towers and displays. Six months later, these products are now available in Singapore, and we know how much they’ll cost.

Of note is the Lenovo Legion Pro 7i (16”, 10), which was the most powerful gaming laptop to come out of Lenovo Legion’s CES announcements. To recap the specs, the Gen 10 Legion Pro 7i comes with an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX and an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti. Memory starts at 32GB of DDR5 RAM, and the display is a 16-inch, 2560 x 1600 pixels 240Hz OLED panel.

Note how neither the left or right sides of the laptop have vents; the only way for air to escape is on the back of the laptop. Image: Lenovo.

To cool these components, the Legion Pro 7i utilises Lenovo’s Coldfront: Vapor cooling solution. Coldfront: Vapor is a relatively new cooling system from Lenovo that was introduced in Legion laptops last year. Two fans pull in cool air into a large vapour chamber that covers the important components of the laptop; this vapor chamber is sealed from the bottom half of the laptop, and due to the lack of side vents, cool air will flow directly over the laptop’s hottest components before escaping from the vents on the back.

Lenovo claims that Coldfront: Vapor allows for the CPU and GPU to consume more power without overheating, totaling a 250W TDP with an additional 15W boost (though they didn’t break down the individual power consumption between the CPU and GPU). 

The new Legion Pro 7i also comes with some AI-powered fan controls. This includes a smart fan system that detects the levels of sound coming out of your speakers or headphones and adjusts the fan noise accordingly.

The Lenovo Legion Pro 34WD-10 features a 4K PureSight OLED display, with 98.5% DCI-P3 coverage, 99% sRGB coverage and colour accuracy of Delta E<2. Image: Lenovo.

Another notable product that was just released is the Lenovo Legion Pro 34WD-10 monitor. It’s certainly impressive on paper; the 34WD-10 is a 34-inch 240Hz OLED monitor with an 800R curvature. The resolution is also nothing to be scoffed at, coming in at 3440 x 1440 pixels, and alongside the high refresh rate, it also has a 0.03ms response time.

It also comes with a host of ports at the back, including a USB-C port capable of 140W output. Image: Lenovo.

Interestingly, though, Lenovo is also emphasising some of the ports on the back of the monitor. That’s because the 34WD-10 houses a USB-C port capable of output, capped at 140W, if you need to charge a laptop or phone. There’s also a USB hub at the back with three USB-A and two USB-C ports, and a RJ45 port for 2.5G Ethernet passthrough.

Other notable features include Lenovo Truesplit, which splits the display into multiple virtual monitors (up to three), and a KVM switch. The latter allows you to swap the display and peripherals between two PCs, or use a Picture-in-Picture mode to display both PCs on the monitor at the same time.

Finally, other noteworthy laptops that were also just released include the Lenovo Legion Pro 5i (16”, 10), which also tops out at an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX and RTX 5070 Ti but starts at a lower spec. For the Ryzen-heads out there, the Lenovo Legion Pro 5 (16”, 10) has also been released; the CPU for the Legion Pro 5 tops out at an AMD Ryzen 9 9955HX (though the Ryzen 9 8945HX is the only CPU available right now), with a choice of an RTX 5060 or 5070 for the GPU.

Both laptops also utilise Coldfront: Hyper, which works similarly to Coldfront: Vapor, but instead directs cold air to copper heatpipes instead of a vapour chamber.

Pricing and Availability

These new Lenovo Legion products are available now, and you can find them on Lenovo’s online store. Lenovo did give starting prices for these, however, they will vary on the website depending on the deals active at the time and the components available. These are the starting prices for some of the new products:

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