Tech Advisor

Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3i

Price: £699 (inc VAT) from fave.co/2YzYv0z

-

The Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3i is one of the most affordable gaming laptops you can buy anywhere thanks to a bargain‑basement price of £699. That’s certainly low enough to prove tempting, but at this level there’s always a danger that too much has been compromise­d to meet the budget.

If that’s the kind of money you have to spend on a gaming laptop, here’s what you can get for your cash.

DESIGN

Happily, the Lenovo looks good so we’re off to a good start. The matte black exterior is made from plastic, and the lid is enhanced at the corners with subtle angled sections. On the inside, the attractive blue backlight is paired with a smart logo finished in the same shade.

The IdeaPad Gaming 3i is easily the match of pricier portables aesthetica­lly, but hands‑on time reveals weaknesses. The screen flexes too much and the

base section has too much movement in its material.

It’s strong enough to be taken out of the house, but it’s worth bearing in mind. It’s not particular­ly slim and light either, with a 25mm body that weighs 2.2kg. At this part of the market, those are entirely ordinary measuremen­ts though.

The Lenovo has two USB 3.2 Gen 1 ports and a Type‑C connection, but the former ports don’t support the faster USB 3.2 Gen 2 standard and the latter doesn’t handle DisplayPor­t or Thunderbol­t.

Another full‑size USB port would have been welcome, too – plug in a mouse and an external hard drive and you’re almost out of options so a USB‑C hub might be a good idea. Elsewhere there’s an HDMI port and an audio jack but no SD card reader.

The IdeaPad Gaming 3i has Gigabit Ethernet and dual‑band 802.11ac wireless, but no Wi‑Fi 6. It’s got a 720p webcam with a privacy shield, but there’s no Windows Hello login support and the image quality is underwhelm­ing. On the inside, you’ll find a spare memory slot and a vacant NVMe connector. The latter can only be used if you remove the 2.5in bay, which is redundant because it has no SATA connector.

KEYBOARD

Lenovo has a hard‑earned reputation for good keyboards, partly thanks to its ThinkPad range, and the IdeaPad doesn’t disappoint. The keys have reasonable travel and a good typing action – it’s fast and consistent, with a noticeable point of actuation. The keyboard is fast and crisp – certainly snappier than the typing units included on most gaming laptops, especially at this price.

The action is easily good enough for mainstream gaming and for long

typing sessions. There are only minor downsides: the numberpad is a little narrow, and the backlight is only blue.

The trackpad is disappoint­ing. Its buttons are too soft – they’re not crisp enough for fast‑paced gameplay. The pad is also installed on the left of the machine, which makes it awkward to alongside the WASD keys. A USB gaming mouse would be far better, of course.

DISPLAY

The Full HD IPS display has a 120Hz refresh rate, but without Nvidia G‑Sync. That’s fine for a machine like this: the resolution is ideal, and the refresh rate is high enough to deliver smooth motion in single‑player games and mainstream e‑sports titles.

You’ll only want to move to 144Hz or beyond if you play particular­ly fast‑paced games or if you’re a keen e‑sports player. If that’s the case, you’ll need a more powerful GPU – and that will involve spending at least £900. The IdeaPad Gaming 3i’s brightness level of 314 nits is good enough for indoor use, but not outside. The black level of 0.23 nits is decent. Those figures create a contrast ratio of 1,356:1, which is good for an IPS display – it helps darker areas deliver proper depth, and there’s good nuance throughout.

The contrast is undermined by colour figures, though. The colour temperatur­e of 7,015K is cool and the Delta E of 5.74 is poor. The Lenovo’s panel also only rendered a measly 56 per cent of the sRGB colour gamut, which is extremely low. The panel can’t display many of the shades needed to provide a vibrant experience – which means the colours look washed‑out and lifeless. The display can still be used for mainstream gaming and media, but it lacks punch, even when compared to other screens at this price.

The speakers are mediocre, too – they’ve got reasonable mid‑range clarity, but there’s no bass, so the Lenovo’s audio lacks depth. Get a gaming headset if you’re serious about gaming.

PERFORMANC­E

The IdeaPad Gaming 3i is underpinne­d by a GeForce GTX 1650 – an entry‑level Nvidia graphics card with a modest 4GB of memory, 896 stream processors and no Ray‑Tracing.

The Intel Core i5‑10300H is a mid‑ range CPU with four multi‑threaded cores, a base speed of 2.5GHz and a Turbo peak of 4.5GHz. It uses the Comet Lake architectu­re, but there’s little difference between this CPU and the Core i5‑9300H used inside older machines. The 256GB Toshiba BG4 SSD delivered mid‑range read and write speeds of 2,345MB/s and 1,522MB/s, which keeps the laptop responsive, but the drive isn’t capacious and there’s no secondary hard disk.

There’s 8GB of DDR4 memory, which is the bare minimum for a consumer laptop, and it’s only installed in single‑ channel configurat­ion – so performanc­e will be hindered.

Despite that, the GPU played Far Cry New Dawn and Wolfenstei­n at frame rates beyond 30fps at Ultra settings. You’ll only have to tinker with settings in top single‑player titles if you want them running at 60fps, or at faster frame rates to properly make use of the 120Hz display.

The GTX 1650 has no issue with e‑sports – it’ll play any top title at triple-figure frame rates.

The IdeaPad Gaming 3i scored 23,386 points in Sky Diver, but this test illustrate­d that more power can be found elsewhere. The GTX 1650 Ti laptop GPU is marginally faster, and the GTX 1660 Ti is much quicker – in the Acer Predator Helios 300 (2020) it scored 29,647 points, but it’s a lot more expensive.

Geekbench 5 (multi-core)

Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3i: 3,997

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 6,022

MSI GS66 Stealth: 5,957

Asus ROG Zephyrus G14: 7,693

Acer Nitro 5: 4,452

PCMark10

Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3i: 4,671

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 5,111

MSI GS66 Stealth: 5,112

Asus ROG Zephyrus G14: 5,682

Acer Nitro 5: 3,929

3DMark Sky Diver

Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3i: 23,386 Acer Helios 300 (2020): 36,003 MSI GS66 Stealth: 34,390

Asus ROG Zephyrus G14: 33,007 Acer Nitro 5: 31,575

Wolfenstei­n (Medium 1080p)

Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3i: 93fps

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 113fps

MSI GS66 Stealth: 104fps

Acer Nitro 5: 104fps

Wolfenstei­n (Ultra 1080p)

Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3i: 54fps

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 103fps

MSI GS66 Stealth: 96fps

Acer Nitro 5: 96fps

Far Cry New Dawn (Medium 1080p)

Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3i: 62fps

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 85fps

MSI GS66 Stealth: 85fps

Acer Nitro 5: 80fps

Far Cry New Dawn (Ultra 1080p)

Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3i: 54fps

Acer Helios 300 (2020): 75fps

MSI GS66 Stealth: 75fps

Acer Nitro 5: 69fps

Battery Drain (120 nits, video loop)

Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3i: 6.13 Acer Helios 300 (2020): 4.5 MSI GS66 Stealth: 8.22

Asus ROG Zephyrus G14: 11.33 Acer Nitro 5: 6.32

There’s little difference between the Core i5‑10300H and its predecesso­r, which is found in the Helios 300 – the newer chip was faster in Geekbench but a little slower in PC Mark 10.

Still, it’s enough power to handle day‑ to-day browsing, Office tasks and games – you won’t encounter issues until you try to run loads of apps at once or tackle photo‑editing. More power is available elsewhere, though. Laptops with the AMD Ryzen 5 4600H are only around £100 more than the IdeaPad Gaming 3i, and that chip is ten thousand points faster in Geekbench. If you want a laptop that can handle tougher applicatio­ns, it’s worth seeking out AMD silicon.

The Lenovo’s modest components mean this laptop is a solid thermal performer. Its peak CPU and GPU temperatur­es of 81 and 66 degrees are fine, and it’s quieter than most gaming laptops. The base panel does become a little warm after extended gaming, but it never gets hot enough to be uncomforta­ble.

BATTERY LIFE

This machine is middling when it comes to battery life. In our video playback test, it lasted for a decent six hours

and 13 minutes, but in gaming it barely managed 90 minutes.

That’s expected for an affordable laptop, and you’ll need to double the budget if you want better longevity.

VERDICT

The cheapest version of the Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3i is the best – affordable, and with enough graphics power to handle mainstream single‑ player gaming and any e‑sports title.

The CPU is good enough for daily use, and the Lenovo is quiet, with a good‑looking chassis and a decent keyboard. Just be aware that the IdeaPad’s price involves compromise­s. The screen is pallid, the trackpad is underwhelm­ing, the port selection is a little limited, and the Lenovo is saddled with single‑channel memory and a relatively small SSD. These are pretty understand­able at the price so if you’re on a tight budget, the Lenovo makes plenty of sense – it looks decent, it’s not disastrous in any particular area and it’s fast enough for everyday computing and gaming. Mike Jennings

SPECIFICAT­IONS

• 15.6in (1,920x1,080) FHD, WVA, AntiGlare, LED Backlight, Narrow, Non‑Touch, 120Hz display

• Windows 10 Home (64‑bit)

• Intel Core i5‑10300H CPU

• Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 4GB GPU

• 8GB 3,200MHz DDR4 RAM

• 256GB Toshiba BG4 NVMe SSD

• 2x USB 3.2 Gen 1

• 1x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type‑C

• 1x HDMI

• 1x audio

• Dual‑band 802.11ac Wi‑Fi

• Bluetooth 5

• 359x250x25­mm

• 2.2kg

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The Lenovo’s keyboard doesn’t disappoint.
The Lenovo’s keyboard doesn’t disappoint.
 ??  ?? The display’s brightness level is fine for indoor use, but not outside.
The display’s brightness level is fine for indoor use, but not outside.
 ??  ?? The Lenovo is a decent choice if you’re on a budget.
The Lenovo is a decent choice if you’re on a budget.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia