• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Lenovo Legion Go S Leak Details €600 MSRP, AMD Ryzen Z2 SoC, and Bigger Battery for Affordable Gaming Handheld

Cpt.Jank

Staff member
Joined
Aug 30, 2024
Messages
85 (0.82/day)
It's been public knowledge for a while now that Lenovo is planning an imminent successor to its Legion Go handheld that has proven rather popular among handheld gamers. Previous leaks and rumors indicated that the Legion Go S 8ARP1, as it will apparently be named, will be a more affordable version of the current Legion Go. Now, thanks to Roland Quandt, Windows Central, and WinFuture, more details about the upcoming Legion Go S have leaked, including images of the device, supposed specifications, and a potential price.

According to the leaks, the new affordable handheld gaming PC will feature some substantial hardware changes, including a slightly smaller eight-inch display, this time with a much lower 1920 × 1200p resolution and a slightly lower 120 Hz refresh rate. Gone, too, are the Nintendo Switch-style detachable controllers, with the Legion Go S instead featuring a white unibody design. What's more interesting than the leaked images of the Legion Go S or the hardware changes—detachable controllers or not, the Legion Go is still intended to be used as a handheld—is the new AMD APU that will seemingly power the Go S. The as-yet unannounced AMD Ryzen Z2G looks like it will be an odd core configuration featuring an AMD Radeon 680M iGPU and Zen 3+ cores. Ultimately, the APU seems like it will put the Legion Go S somewhere between the current-generation Legion Go and devices featuring the AMD Ryzen Z1 (non-extreme), which is a good place to be if Lenovo hopes to compete with the likes of the Steam Deck OLED, which will seemingly cost around the same as the Legion Go S, depending on which region you are in.



According to German-language publication, WinFuture, the Legion Go S will cost around €600 (~$635) when it launches sometime early next year, which is around €200 less than the original MSRP of the original Legion Go and around €80 cheaper than the Steam Deck OLED was when it launched. It's also possible that the Legion Go S will be slightly cheaper outside of Europe than the raw currency conversion suggests, since import taxes and tariffs often mean hardware costs more in European countries.

By the looks of it, the Legion Go S will be a much more conventional handheld gaming PC, similar to the likes of the ASUS ROG Ally and Valve Steam Deck, although slightly larger than both of those, given the larger screen size. In addition to the smaller screen and potentially less power-hungry CPU, we will supposedly see a 55 Wh battery, which is slightly larger than the one used in the extant Lenovo Legion Go, meaning the new gaming handheld may offer longer play times than its bigger brother.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
Joined
Mar 7, 2011
Messages
4,600 (0.91/day)
MS needs to really work on Xbox based OS for handhelds(based on Windows) or there is a chance they will lose out to Steam OS in this segment.

 

AcE

Joined
Dec 3, 2024
Messages
107 (11.89/day)
MS needs to really work on Xbox based OS for handhelds(based on Windows) or there is a chance they will lose out to Steam OS in this segment.

Windows is better for gaming, MS just has to fix the bloat/power consumption. I don't like to deal with incompatibilities and only being able to use Steam. Steam OS is for Steam only more or less, big no thanks from me, would never buy such a device.
 
Joined
Mar 7, 2011
Messages
4,600 (0.91/day)
Windows is better for gaming, MS just has to fix the bloat/power consumption. I don't like to deal with incompatibilities and only being able to use Steam. Steam OS is for Steam only more or less, big no thanks from me, would never buy such a device.
Not just the bloat but also the UI and scheduler. Steam OS has been built for handhelds with small screen unlike Windows OS.
 

Cheeseball

Not a Potato
Supporter
Joined
Jan 2, 2009
Messages
2,012 (0.35/day)
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
System Name Titan
Processor AMD Ryzen™ 7 7950X3D
Motherboard ASRock X870 Taichi Lite
Cooling Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 EVO CPU
Memory TEAMGROUP T-Force Delta RGB 2x16GB DDR5-6000 CL30
Video Card(s) ASRock Radeon RX 7900 XTX 24 GB GDDR6 (MBA) / NVIDIA RTX 4090 Founder's Edition
Storage Crucial T500 2TB x 3
Display(s) LG 32GS95UE-B, ASUS ROG Swift OLED (PG27AQDP), LG C4 42" (OLED42C4PUA)
Case Cooler Master QUBE 500 Flatpack Macaron
Audio Device(s) Kanto Audio YU2 and SUB8 Desktop Speakers and Subwoofer, Cloud Alpha Wireless
Power Supply Corsair SF1000
Mouse Logitech Pro Superlight 2 (White), G303 Shroud Edition
Keyboard Keychron K2 HE Wireless / 8BitDo Retro Mechanical Keyboard (N Edition) / NuPhy Air75 v2
VR HMD Meta Quest 3 512GB
Software Windows 11 Pro 64-bit 23H2 Build 22631.4317
Probably the same IPS screen as the incoming Claw A2VM (8" 1200p 120Hz VRR). And Ryzen Z2G is basically a way for AMD to reduce their mobile Zen 3+ APUs, so say hello to the venerable 6800U/6800H/6800HS/6900HS/7735HS again.
 

AcE

Joined
Dec 3, 2024
Messages
107 (11.89/day)
I bet, you never have tried an oled steam deck against a Legion Pro.
I read the reviews from TPU which always state that the ROG Ally performs better than the Steam Deck. Not that I need those, the ROG Ally has a CPU about 3x as strong and a GPU about 50% stronger. Isn't the Legion Pro about the same as the ROG Ally? It means it's also easily better than the Deck.

Not just the bloat but also the UI and scheduler. Steam OS has been built for handhelds with small screen unlike Windows OS.
This is not a issue, Windows can be freely modified and I doubt Asus has not modified and optimised the OS.
 
Top