 16-inch laptops have been taken over the productivity and content creation market. Lenovo is embracing the trend, offering a provenant of most of its laptops, including the Idea Pad 5 that we have today. The laptop is entirely made of aluminum, which is reflected in the weight and thickness, stopping the scales at 1.92 kilograms and having a profile of 16.9 millimeters. The design is the same as last year, with rounded corners and soft edges. The Lenovo branding is minimal, with two small appearances at the edge of the lid and the base. The leading keyboard deck doesn't show a lot of flex, however the lid is slightly more flimsy. Still, it opens with one hand, revealing a full-sized keyboard with a numpad. The typing experience is great thanks to the clicky feedback, despite the slightly shorter key travel. The touchpad is massive and covered in miler, which is very smooth. The responsiveness and accuracy are great as well. The left side houses a power plug, an HDMI 2.0 port, one 10-gigabit USB-type C port, which has Thunderbolt certification on Intel models and an audio jack. On the other side, you get a microSD card reader and two full-sized 5-gigabit USBs. There are two display options that have a QHD plus resolution and an IPS panel. One of them also has a 120 Hz refresh rate ideal for some competitive games. We tested the regular 60 Hz option, which has excellent viewing angles and max brightness of 337 nits and a high-contrast ratio, which should ensure dark black colors. It covers 90% of the SMGP gamut and reaches a delta E value of 1.5 with our design and gaming profile, which you can purchase by clicking the link in the description. Only 2 per 100 people watching this video are subscribers. If you decide to just start following us, we'll be able to reinvest more in our laboratory, thus making even more helpful videos for you. Thank you, you're awesome! The IdeaPad 5 Pro is equipped with a 75-watt power battery. Our configuration supports a Ryzen 5 6600HS and an RTX 3050 with a 65-watt power limit. The laptop lasts for 10 hours and 44 minutes of web browsing, or 10 hours and 10 minutes of video playback, which is a good result. The Ryzen 5 6600HS has a 35-watt TDP, 10 watts lower than the regular 6600H, which is a good option for thinner laptops as the CPU can maintain more stable clock speeds in lower temperatures. When compared to its Intel counterpart, the IdeaPad 5 Pro with 45-watt Core i5-12500H, it does show a lacking performance, both in 3D and 2D rendering. On the other hand, the AMD-powered model uses a dedicated GPU, which is much better than the integrated graphics inside the Core i5. The Intel model has access to the ARC A370M, which we were able to snack up and test for ourselves. To keep it short, some titles need the GPU to settle down for about 10 minutes after which the FPS improves and the games run better. Other games like Far Cry 6 and Shadow of the Tomb Raider give us a blue screen of death, which is very unusual. Intel definitely needs better driver support. Desk rendering performed decently, not having significant FPS drops even at the highest preset. We have a whole playlist featuring benchmarks of the ARC A370M with a total of 40 games on our laptop media benchmarks channel. The laptop uses a simple cooling solution with two heat pipes that cover both the processor and graphics. There are two fans and two heat sinks as well. We also have to mention the grill on the base, which supplies air to the setup. The CPU manages to maintain high clock speeds, running at 3.7 GHz on all 6 cores. At the same time, it gives a 54W TDP throughout the whole stress test, while not going above 84°C. The GPU runs closer to 60W, with 62W being the max TDP that did 30-50 reaches in the test. Clock speeds and temperatures are great, which is fantastic for prolonged loads like video editing. Comfort during the test was good, as the two fans didn't produce any unbearable noise, while the keyboard's hotspot was only 43°C. Despite the large 16-inch footprint, the IdeaPad 5 Pro comes with soldered memory. You only get up to 16GB of LPDDR5 RAM, but at least it runs in Quad channel mode. Still, it would get eaten up very quickly by every creator program. Storage-wise, there is only one M.2 PCI-EX4 slot that supports Gen4 SSDs. If you want to see the insides of the laptop, we'll have our tear-down video linked in the upper right corner. The IdeaPad 5 Pro delivers performing and efficient hardware while keeping temperatures and comfort at a very good level. While the Intel version does carry more performance, its RGPU does have its driver issues, which really limit its gaming capabilities. All the while the RTX 3050 that we have here is performing fantastically. The only thing that's got us worried is the low RAM configuration that's available, so hopefully Lenovo can up the capacity. Check out our detailed review which goes more in-depth and covers everything there is to know about the new Lenovo IdeaPad 5 Pro.