Microsoft Microsoft Lp7 13.8" CU7 32 512GB Tablet PC - Review

The Microsoft Lp7 tablet bets everything on its massive 32GB of RAM, but with a weak CPU and a high price, it's a hard sell for almost anyone.

RAM 32 GB
Storage 512 GB
Screen 13.8"
Stylus No
Cellular No
Microsoft Microsoft Lp7 13.8"  CU7 32 512GB Tablet PC - tablet
38.3 Punteggio Complessivo

Overview

The Microsoft Lp7 tablet is a bit of a puzzle. On paper, it's packing a massive 32GB of RAM, which is more than most laptops. But the rest of the specs tell a different story. It's clearly built for someone who needs a ton of memory for specific tasks, but maybe isn't chasing raw processing power or a stunning screen. It's an interesting niche play in a market full of all-rounders. So who is this for? The performance scores give us a clue. It's rated best for entertainment and reading, but it's weakest in business applications. That suggests it's not your typical productivity workhorse. Think of it more as a premium media consumption device with the headroom to handle some heavier apps in the background, thanks to all that RAM. The real question is whether that one standout feature is enough to justify the eye-watering $2,080 price tag, especially when you look at what else is out there.

Performance

Let's talk numbers. That 32GB of RAM puts it in the 92nd percentile, which is genuinely impressive for a tablet. It means you can have dozens of browser tabs open, stream 4K video, and jump into a photo editing app without the system breaking a sweat. The 512GB storage is also solid, landing in the 81st percentile. But here's where things get tricky. The CPU and GPU performance are in the 34th and 36th percentiles, respectively. That means for tasks like video editing, 3D rendering, or even some high-end gaming, this tablet will feel sluggish compared to its peers. The benchmarks confirm it's not a speed demon. It's a device with one very strong muscle and a few weaker ones. For everyday web browsing and media, it'll feel fast because of the RAM. For anything computationally intense, you'll hit a ceiling pretty quickly.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 44.2
GPU 45.9
RAM 97.2
Screen 28.4
Battery 48.7
Feature 27.1
Storage 89
Connectivity 21.3
Social Proof 31.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Massive 32GB of RAM (92nd percentile) allows for incredible multitasking and smooth app switching. 97th
  • Generous 512GB of storage (81st percentile) gives you plenty of room for apps, files, and media. 89th
  • Battery life is right in the middle of the pack (50th percentile), so you should get a full day of typical use.
  • The 13.8-inch screen size is a good sweet spot between portability and viewability for reading and watching videos.
  • It runs a full desktop OS (likely Windows), which is more flexible for certain software than mobile tablet OSes.

Cons

  • The CPU performance is below average (34th percentile), making it slow for demanding tasks like video encoding or complex calculations. 21th
  • The integrated GPU is weak (36th percentile), so it's not suitable for gaming or graphics-intensive creative work. 27th
  • The display quality is in the bottom third (27th percentile), so don't expect vibrant, color-accurate panels for professional photo work. 28th
  • Connectivity options are very limited (13th percentile), which could mean fewer ports or slower wireless standards. 31th
  • Overall features and build quality seem lacking (21st percentile), especially at this premium price point.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Memory & Storage

RAM 32 GB
Storage 512 GB

Display

Size 13.8"

Value & Pricing

At $2,080, the Lp7 is asking for a lot of money. You're paying a premium almost entirely for that 32GB of RAM. When you look at the rest of the package—the middling CPU, the weak GPU, the average screen—it's hard to see the value. For the same price or less, you could get a high-end laptop or a competing tablet with a much more balanced and powerful spec sheet. This feels like a device built for a very specific, memory-hungry use case that isn't clearly defined by its 'best for' scores. For general entertainment and reading, which it scores highest in, there are far cheaper and better options.

2.080 USD

vs Competition

Stack it up against its direct competitors and the trade-offs become stark. The Apple iPad Pro with the M5 chip will run circles around it in CPU and GPU performance, have a much better screen, and likely cost less, though you're locked into iPadOS and get less RAM. The Microsoft Surface Pro 11 Copilot+ PC is a more direct Windows competitor; it will have a far faster neural processing unit for AI tasks, a better display, and probably similar RAM options, making the Lp7's value proposition even shakier. Even the Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra offers a stunning OLED screen and a more powerful chip for high-end media consumption, which is supposedly the Lp7's strength. The Lp7 only makes sense if your workflow is bottlenecked solely by RAM and nothing else, which is a rare scenario.

Spec Microsoft Microsoft Lp7 13.8" CU7 32 512GB Tablet PC - Apple iPad Pro Apple 11" iPad Pro M5 Chip (Standard Glass, 512GB, Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft 13" Surface Pro Copilot+ PC (11th Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Samsung 12.4" Galaxy Tab S10+ 256GB Multi-Touch Lenovo Yoga Tab Series Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus HP GPD Win MAX 2 2025 Handheld Gaming PC with AMD
CPU - Apple M5 Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 MediaTek 9300 Qualcomm® Snapdragon® 8 Gen 3, QCM8650 AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370
RAM (GB) 32 12 32 12 16 32
Storage (GB) 512 512 1000 256 256 2048
Screen 13.8" 11" 2420x1668 13" 2880x1920 12.4" 2800x1752 12.7" 2944x1840 10.1" 1920x1200
OS - iPadOS Windows 11 Home Android 14 Android 14 Windows 11 Home
Stylus false true true true false false
Cellular false false false false false false

Verdict

I can't recommend the Microsoft Lp7 for most people. If you're a general user looking for a premium tablet for entertainment and light work, look at the iPad Pro, Surface Pro, or a Galaxy Tab. You'll get a better overall experience for your money. However, if you are a very specific user—maybe someone running niche scientific software, complex local server simulations, or virtual machines that absolutely require 32GB of RAM in a tablet form factor—and you don't care about screen quality or processing speed, then the Lp7 has a unique offering. But for 99% of buyers, that $2,080 is much better spent elsewhere on a device that excels in more than just one area.