Did this coupon
work for you?
work for you?
Post Date | Sold By | Sale Price | Activity |
---|---|---|---|
05/19/24 | Best Buy | $1000 frontpage |
120 |
04/21/24 | Best Buy | $1050 frontpage |
63 |
04/07/24 | Best Buy | $1,049.99 popular |
13 |
03/10/24 | Best Buy | $1,049.99 popular |
45 |
02/25/24 | eBay | $1050 frontpage |
73 |
02/11/24 | eBay | $1060 frontpage |
65 |
12/26/23 | Best Buy | $1,099.99 popular |
46 |
12/03/23 | Best Buy | $1150 frontpage |
47 |
11/09/23 | Best Buy | $1,199.99 popular |
22 |
Sold By | Sale Price |
---|---|
Best Buy | $1479.99 |
Product Name: | Lenovo - Legion Slim 5 14.5" OLED Gaming Laptop - Ryzen 7 7840HS with 16GB Memory - NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 8GB with 1 TB SSD - Storm Grey |
Product SKU: | 6559123_6559123 |
UPC: | 197529770290 |
The link has been copied to the clipboard.
34 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
https://www.bestbuy.com/site/asus...Id=6535495 [bestbuy.com]
I found this detailed side-by-side comparison very helpful https://youtu.be/fOi9ymIYsws
Guy does a great job. One thing I wish he did, was disable CPU boosting on G14 when doing performance comparisons. Disabling boosting on compact chassis like G14 has been shown to improve overall performance. Then disable it on Legion and see if it helps there too. https://www.reddit.com/r/Zephyrus..._boo
When disabling boosting you have to disable it under every power profile. Put your system in silent/quiet mode, disable it, then put your system in balance/performance mode, go back to power options in windows, you will see it's a different profile now with all new settings, disable it there again, and continue doing it for all the power modes in your armory crate.
Personally, Legion 14 looks great, but I will keep 2022 G14 for now. I upgraded ram to 40gigs, and mediatech wifi card to intel which gives better wifi connection. If this Legion was a 32gig variant I would be extremely tempted to swap.
I'm a fan of Jarrod's Tech review channel, I think he does a good job reviewing laptops.
2023 G14 review: https://youtu.be/8L1QXpz8Y_M
2023 Legion 14 review: https://youtu.be/ubdhf0HNVDE
I found this detailed side-by-side comparison very helpful https://youtu.be/fOi9ymIYsws
Guy does a great job. One thing I wish he did, was disable CPU boosting on G14 when doing performance comparisons. Disabling boosting on compact chassis like G14 has been shown to improve overall performance. Then disable it on Legion and see if it helps there too. https://www.reddit.com/r/Zephyrus..._boo
When disabling boosting you have to disable it under every power profile. Put your system in silent/quiet mode, disable it, then put your system in balance/performance mode, go back to power options in windows, you will see it's a different profile now with all new settings, disable it there again, and continue doing it for all the power modes in your armory crate.
Personally, Legion 14 looks great, but I will keep 2022 G14 for now. I upgraded ram to 40gigs, and mediatech wifi card to intel which gives better wifi connection. If this Legion was a 32gig variant I would be extremely tempted to swap.
I'm a fan of Jarrod's Tech review channel, I think he does a good job reviewing laptops.
2023 G14 review: https://youtu.be/8L1QXpz8Y_M
2023 Legion 14 review: https://youtu.be/ubdhf0HNVDE
My G14 spent more time in Asus repair shop. I lost all confidence in Asus because of that #$@&*$#. Bad motherboard 2x and bad battery.
Historically, I've sold hundreds of laptops to clients and honestly, can't remember the last time I had a memory module failure. Back in the day? Yes. But reliability of almost all components are very reliable. AND -- soldered RAM is actually more reliable as the connections are solid instead of in a socket that can get dirty or have a poor pin connection.
Historically, I've sold hundreds of laptops to clients and honestly, can't remember the last time I had a memory module failure. Back in the day? Yes. But reliability of almost all components are very reliable. AND -- soldered RAM is actually more reliable as the connections are solid instead of in a socket that can get dirty or have a poor pin connection.
Second this. I not only jumped on this deal, I have probably bought and sold a dozen soldered RAM laptops and three times that in total laptops in the last decade. I cannot even recall a single memory module failure I have seen on a laptop. Coming into threads to draw issue with a standard practice for an arbitrary reason isn't helpful to anyone. Soldered RAM limits upgradeability, which may be a bummer, but that's where the important aspect of that feature stops.