Lenovo’s latest Yoga Pro 7 pairs AMD’s Ryzen AI Max+ 388 processor with Radeon 8060S graphics and support for up to 48GB of graphics memory allocation. That figure exceeds the VRAM capacity found on many dedicated gaming and workstation GPUs, making the laptop an unusual entry in the thin-and-light creator category.
The notebook is built on AMD’s Strix Halo platform, where the processor and graphics hardware share a unified memory architecture. Instead of relying on dedicated graphics memory, the Radeon 8060S can access a large portion of the available LPDDR5X memory. On the 64GB model, users can allocate up to 48GB to the GPU for demanding workloads.
That extra memory can benefit applications working with large image files, complex video timelines, high-resolution textures, engineering projects, 3D assets, and local model processing. Tasks that normally push integrated graphics to their limits gain access to a considerably larger memory pool.
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A 15.3-inch OLED touchscreen accompanies the new hardware. The display offers a 2560 × 1600 resolution, a 165Hz refresh rate, Dolby Vision support, DisplayHDR True Black 1000 certification, and full coverage of the sRGB, Adobe RGB, and DCI-P3 color spaces.
Lenovo offers memory configurations ranging from 32GB to 64GB at launch, while selected markets will receive versions with up to 128GB of LPDDR5X-8000 memory. The higher-capacity models further expand the amount of memory available for graphics-intensive workloads.
The laptop features Lenovo’s Force Pad technology, allowing the touchpad to function as a drawing surface when paired with the optional Yoga Pen Gen 2. This addition is aimed at designers, illustrators, and content creators who regularly work with pen input.


Cooling hardware consists of dual fans and four heat pipes. Lenovo rates the platform for workloads reaching up to 90W while maintaining stable performance during long editing, rendering, and production sessions.
An 84Wh battery powers the device, with support for 140W USB-C charging. Lenovo claims Rapid Charge Pro can restore up to 50 percent battery capacity in roughly 30 minutes.
Connectivity includes two USB4 ports, two USB-A ports, HDMI 2.1, a UHS-II SD card reader, and a 3.5mm audio jack. Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4 are onboard.

Additional hardware includes a 5MP IR webcam with Windows Hello support, Dolby Atmos speakers, a quad-microphone array, and an aluminum chassis finished in Thunder Grey. The laptop measures 16.7 mm thick and starts at 1.71 kg.
The Yoga Pro 7 is already available in Australia, Hong Kong, Malaysia, and Singapore. Australian pricing starts at AUD 3,799.
Sources: Hong Kong, Malaysia, Lenovo Australia, & Singapore



