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October 2, 2025

Lenovo Legion Go 2 review: A gaming handheld dripping with luxury | usagoldmines.com

At a glance

Expert’s Rating

Pros

  • Competitive handheld performance
  • Big and beautiful OLED display
  • Detachable controllers
  • Surprisingly quiet

Cons

  • Expensive
  • Windows isn’t ready for handhelds yet
  • Glossy display isn’t ideal in direct sunlight
  • A little heavy

Our Verdict

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 is an awesome handheld gaming PC with the best display you’ll find on a handheld gaming PC. The hardware is excellent, but the high price and the Windows 11 experience are huge drawbacks.

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The Lenovo Legion Go 2 is a high-end handheld gaming PC that outshines the Asus ROG Xbox Ally X in many ways. The huge 8.8-inch OLED display is beautiful, and you’re getting everything from a built-in kickstand to detachable controllers for flexibility. For a handheld gaming PC, this is great hardware.

There are two huge elephants in the room here, so let’s get them out of the way so I can review the Lenovo Legion Go 2 for what it is.

Lenovo Legion Go 2: The elephants

First, Windows 11 still isn’t ready for a gaming handheld. When I reviewed the Lenovo Legion Go S, I noted how much of a mess the interface is compared to the Steam Deck I own.

For example, Windows 11 has a “gamepad” keyboard layout that lets you navigate with the on-screen keyboard with the joysticks, but it’s not activated by default. You have to tap into the little settings menu in the on-screen keyboard and turn it on before you can use said on-screen keyboard with the joysticks. Many people will miss this buried setting. Why is this not activated by default on a handheld gaming PC? Windows 11 is full of issues like this.

The good news is that Microsoft is making Windows better for handheld PCs, but the bad news is that Legion Go 2 owners will have to wait for the fix. The Legion Go 2 will get it in “Spring 2026.” If you want it sooner, you’ll have to buy Asus’s ROG Xbox Ally, which will be available in mid-October, shortly after the launch of this Lenovo’s Legion Go 2. I haven’t yet gone hands on with ROG Xbox Ally console, but from a user experience standpoint, I imagine its optimized Windows experience for handheld PCs is going to be much better than the Legion Go 2 at launch. (There’s already a leaked way to enable it on any handheld, but your mileage may vary.)

The second elephant in the room is pricing. The Legion Go 2 we reviewed is $1,349 at launch, and the base model starts at $1,099. Handheld PC gaming started off with surprisingly affordable hardware, but this device costs more than many gaming laptops. It’s a premium device.

Tariffs are almost certainly to blame for part of this. But deals can still be found — as I write this, it’s the Steam Autumn Sale and you can grab a base-model Steam Deck for $319.20. You’d have to really want higher-end hardware (without a polished operating system experience) to pick this over a Steam Deck.

However, if you are looking for a high-end handheld experience and you don’t mind the extra expense — and if you know what you’re getting into with the Windows operating system quirks on a device like this one — this handheld combines the latest high-end handheld-optimized hardware with a beautiful OLED display in a nice form factor, and I really enjoyed playing with it.

Lenovo Legion Go 2: Specs

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 has an AMD Ryzen Z2 processor with AMD Radeon 890M-class graphics. I reviewed the $1,349 model, which comes with AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme hardware and 32GB of RAM. Bear in mind that the base model comes with AMD Ryzen Z2 hardware and 16GB of RAM, so it won’t perform at the same level.

Under the hood, this is RDNA 3.5 — the same graphics you’ll find in Ryzen AI 300 series (Strix Point) laptops, but tuned for a handheld where power usage is critical.

There’s a lot to like here: The RAM is soldered, but the internal SSD is user upgradable. Plus, this machine’s USB4 ports mean external GPUs are a possibility.

  • Model number: Lenovo Legion Go 2 83N0000BUS
  • CPU: AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme
  • Memory: 32 GB LPDDR5x-8000 RAM
  • Graphics/GPU: AMD Radeon 890M
  • NPU: None
  • Display: 8.8-inch 1920×1200 OLED display with touch screen and up to 144Hz variable refresh rate
  • Storage: 1 TB M.2 SSD
  • Webcam: None
  • Connectivity: 2x USB Type-C (USB4), 1x combo audio jack, 1x microSD card reader
  • Networking: Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3
  • Biometrics: Fingerprint reader
  • Battery capacity: 74 Watt-hours
  • Dimensions: 11.64 x 5.38 x 1.66 inches
  • Weight: 2.03 pounds
  • MSRP: $1,349 as tested

Lenovo Legion Go 2: Design and build quality

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 is made of black plastic — Lenovo calls this color “Eclipse Black.” It’s a thoughtful design that feels good to hold, and the plastic is high-quality. Lenovo has really gone above and beyond thinking through ways to make the hardware better than many competing consoles, including the Steam Deck I own and the Legion Go S I reviewed.

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 isn’t trying to be the lightest console — it has a big 8.8-inch OLED screen — so it’s no surprise it’s a little on the heavy side. But the extra weight is a fair trade for the higher-end hardware and larger screen.

For example, you can easily detach the side controllers like you’re using a Nintendo Switch. The Legion Go 2 also has a built-in kickstand, so you can easily prop it up and use it on any surface. The power button has a built-in fingerprint reader so you don’t have to tap a PIN into the sign-in screen each time you wake the console. While the side controllers are detachable, you have to press a button on the back of each one to detach them. While attached, they feel incredibly secure.

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 isn’t trying to be the lightest console — it has a big 8.8-inch OLED screen — so it’s no surprise it’s a little on the heavy side. At 2.02 pounds (compared to 1.41 pounds for a Steam Deck OLED), that’s a real factor. It’s not that it’s too heavy to hold, but the weight discourages me from holding it in certain positions for extended periods of time. But the extra weight is a fair trade for the higher-end hardware and larger screen.

Lenovo Legion Go 2: Joysticks, controls, and trackpad

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 touts Hall Effect joysticks for a smooth experience and no stick drift, and they feel great. The buttons on the Lenovo Legion Go 2 feel great. Lenovo has also added a few extra buttons for accessing Legion software features, the desktop, and Alt+Tabbing between apps. On the top of the handheld, you’ll find power and volume buttons.

The right controller can be used in “FPS Mode” — you detach it, snap it into a base, and flip a switch on the bottom. Then you can hold it and move it around. While it looks like a joystick, it’s more like a virtual mouse. I didn’t find it particularly ergonomic in my experiments with it, but perhaps you’ll love it if you put some time into learning it.

This handheld also has a good-size trackpad on the right controller, and it’s just the right side and shape to use the mouse with your thumb. After the extremely tiny trackpad on the Lenovo Legion Go S, this one feels excellent. But it’s not like a Steam Deck’s trackpads — there’s no haptic feedback here. It’s a convenient way to accomplish some mouse input, but I wouldn’t want to use it all the time.

The display here is also a touch screen with multi-touch. That’s often critical for navigating Windows, but it does mean you’re encouraged to put fingerprint smudges on the display.

Lenovo Legion Go 2: Display and speakers

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

The Lenovo Legion Go 2’s display is one of its standout features. It’s an 8.8-inch OLED screen on a handheld PC. What’s not to like? I’m not sure I’d even want a larger screen than this one when I’m holding it this close to my face!

With HDR support and up to 1,100 nits of peak HDR brightness and a variable refresh rate up to 144Hz, it’s beautiful. And the display doesn’t seem to massively cut into battery life, either. The battery life was ticking down at a reasonable rate that felt similar to other gaming handhelds I’ve used, despite this higher-end display.

While this is a vivid OLED display, it has a glossy surface. It’s prone to reflections in bright environments like direct sunlight. If you’ll be using this as a handheld console outdoors in challenging lighting environments, that’s going to be a problem: You may want to look for a device with a more anti-reflective screen. But glossy screens look beautiful in the right lighting, and this one is no exception.

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

The HDR support was another place where Windows 11 doesn’t make sense on this handheld: By default, Windows disabled HDR on this device while it was unplugged “to save battery life.” That’s yet another example of Windows not understanding these devices.

The speakers here are great for gaming. They had more than enough volume, and the chunky sounds of firing a shotgun in Doom: The Dark Ages were satisfying. Naturally, there’s not a lot of bass in a handheld console.

Lenovo Legion Go 2: Microphone and biometrics

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 has a dual-array microphone setup. The microphone sounds fine, and the audio is clear enough for in-game chat on a handheld gaming device. It’s a little muffled — this doesn’t sound like a high-end business laptop mic picking up crystal-clear audio for Zoom meetings. But it’s plenty good for voice chatting while gaming.

There’s no webcam on the Lenovo Legion Go 2, but you probably wouldn’t want one and it might be a challenge to fit it into the bezel.

Lenovo put a fingerprint reader into the power button, and it works extremely well. When you wake the Legion Go 2 by pressing the power button, it can instantly sign you into Windows with Windows Hello. You just have to rest your finger on it for a split-second longer. It makes the experience of waking the console fast and streamlines a major pain point Windows 11 has on a gaming handheld.

Lenovo Legion Go 2: Connectivity

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 has two USB Type-C ports, and both of them are USB4. You’ll find one on the top of the handheld and one on the bottom. It comes with a USB-C charger, so it’ll charge through one of these ports. Because these are speedy USB4 ports, this handheld should be ready for external GPUs, too.

Aside from the two USB-C ports, you’ll find a combo audio jack and a microSD card slot on the bottom of the handheld. That’s it, and it’s plenty of ports for handheld gaming PC. If you want more ports when using it at a desk, you can connect a dock to the USB-C port.

This device has both Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3 connectivity. I’d prefer to see Wi-Fi 7 at this point, especially in a premium $1,349 handheld gaming PC, but most people don’t have Wi-Fi 7 yet anyway.

Lenovo Legion Go 2: Performance

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 had solid performance. I was able to play Doom: The Dark Ages, and while I prefer shooting demons with a higher FPS, it was technically playable. Treating this like a console, I fired up games like Sonic X Shadow Generations and saw buttery-smooth performance. The reality is that, while handhelds are improving a lot, their graphics performance is far from high-end desktop or laptop GPUs. If you’re mainly looking to play the latest high-end, most-demanding games, these may not be ideal. But the hardware here offers incredible smooth performance in older games.

I was impressed by how quiet the fans stayed, even in demanding games like Doom: The Dark Ages. The speakers could easily drown them out, and the console itself stayed comfortable, with cool air being sucked in on the underside of the device and blown out the vents on the top. Playing a lightweight 2D game like Deltarune, they were so quiet I could only just barely hear them once I muted the game.

As always when we review gaming PCs, we ran the Lenovo Legion Go 2 through our standard benchmarks to see how it performs. The results show us how it performed against previous generation hardware (I benchmarked the Lenovo Legion Go S) as well as modern gaming laptops.

Spoiler: It’s a big upgrade over the last Lenovo handheld I reviewed. In many workloads, the AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme hardware in the Legion Go 2 was often nearly twice as fast as the AMD Ryzen Z2 Go hardware in the Legion Go S.

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

First, we run PCMark 10 to get an idea of overall system performance. This is designed as an overall system performance benchmark, but CPU performance is a big factor.

With an overall PCMark 10 score of 7,285, overall performance was quite good. The AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme hardware here is substantially ahead of the lower-end AMD Ryzen Z2 Go hardware in the Lenovo Legion Go S. It scored on par with lower-end gaming laptops.

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

Next, we run Cinebench R20. This is a heavily multithreaded benchmark that focuses on overall CPU performance. It’s a quick benchmark, so cooling under extended workloads isn’t a factor. But, since it’s heavily multithreaded, CPUs with more cores have a huge advantage.

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 with its eight-core Ryzen Z2 Extreme CPU produced a multi-threaded score of 5,239, a huge jump over the Legion Go S. Unsurprisingly, it didn’t catch up to larger and more power-hungry gaming laptops, but this is very respectable for a handheld PC.

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

We also run an encode with Handbrake. This is another heavily multithreaded benchmark, but it runs over an extended period. This demands the PC’s cooling kick in, and many PCs will throttle and slow down under load.

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 completed the encode process in 1,076 seconds, which is nearly 18 minutes. That’s only a bit slower than gaming laptops with AMD Ryzen hardware. It’s also a massive improvement over the Legion Go S’s performance here.

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

Next, we run a graphical benchmark, just like we do on gaming laptops. First, we run 3Dmark Time Spy, a graphical benchmark that focuses on GPU performance.

With an overall 3DMark Time Spy score of 3,984, the Lenovo Legion Go 2 showed substantial improvements over the Legion Go S. The HP Elitebook X G1a in the chart here isn’t a gaming laptop, it’s a premium business laptop with a similar GPU. That’s a perfect example of what you’re getting here — higher-end integrated graphics from AMD.

Compared to gaming laptops with beefy discrete GPUs, this machine is far behind on GPU performance. But that’s the idea. It’s designed for handheld use, possibly away from an electrical outlet. Big gaming laptops need to be plugged in to deliver solid gaming performance.

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

After that, we run the benchmark built into Shadow of the Tomb Raider, an older game, but one that’s very useful for comparing performance across hardware.

With an average FPS of 40, Shadow of the Tomb Raider was playable on the highest settings here, unlike on the Lenovo Legion Go S. You’ll get even smoother performance if you nudge the settings down, but once again this is a great example of the relative performance of a handheld vs. a traditional gaming laptop.

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

Finally, we run the benchmark in Metro Exodus. This is a very demanding game, and we run it with extreme detail settings. With an average FPS of 14 in our standard benchmark, the Lenovo Legion Go 2 was substantially faster than the Legion Go S here — nearly twice as fast. But you can see how much faster gaming laptops are.

Overall, the AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme and its Radeon 890M-class graphics delivered solid performance for a handheld gaming PC.

Lenovo Legion Go 2: Battery life

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 has a 74 Watt-hour battery along with AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme hardware, which can operate between 15W and 35W of TDP. The precise battery life you’re going to get will heavily depend on how you use the handheld. A less demanding game will use much less power. Also, you can configure power usage by pressing the button at the top of the right controller and choosing your preferred thermal mode. “Performance” will deliver more hardware power for gaming but drain the battery faster, for example. Depending on the game you’re playing, lower thermal settings may be just fine.

Foundry / Chris Hoffman

For our standard Windows PC battery benchmark, we play a 4K copy of Tears of Steel on Windows 11 with airplane mode enabled until the PC suspends itself. We set the screen to 250 nits of brightness for our battery benchmarks. This is a best-case scenario for any PC since local video playback is so efficient, and real battery life in day-to-day use is always going to be less than this.

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 lasted 796 minutes in this test — that’s over 13 hours and beats even the HP Elitebook X G1a, which is a business laptop. This hardware can really scale down and sip electricity when you aren’t playing demanding games.

Lenovo Legion Go 2: Conclusion

The Lenovo Legion Go 2 is a high-end handheld gaming PC. The AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme processor and its Radeon 890M-class graphics delivered solid performance and efficiency for a handheld gaming PC, the screen is big and beautiful, and the hardware is well thought out. You get detachable controllers and a kickstand for extra flexibility, too.

But, between the Windows handheld experience and tariffs driving up the cost of hardware, Lenovo is fighting an uphill battle here. At $1,349, you could currently buy a $999 gaming laptop and a $319 Steam Deck and come out ahead with a more powerful laptop at your desk and a more lightweight handheld for on-the-go gaming.

But if you want a handheld gaming PC with higher-end premium hardware — that 8.8-inch OLED is nice — and you’re willing to wait for an improved software experience or deal with the realities of Windows 11 today, you’ll be happy with this, assuming you’re ready to spend this much cash.

 

This articles is written by : Nermeen Nabil Khear Abdelmalak

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