Lenovo ThinkStation P2 Tower Gen 2 Review

A beastly CPU meets an embarrassingly weak GPU in Lenovo's latest tower. The ThinkStation P2 Tower Gen 2 has potential, but you'll need to swap that graphics card before doing any real work.

CPU Intel Core Ultra 7 265
RAM 32 GB
Storage 512 GB
GPU NVIDIA RTX A400
Form Factor mid-tower
Psu W 500
OS Windows 11 Pro
Lenovo ThinkStation P2 Tower Gen 2 desktop
78.5 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

The ThinkStation P2 Tower Gen 2 has a fast 20-core CPU and excellent connectivity, but the RTX A400 GPU is dead weight. Buy it only if you plan to toss in a proper graphics card.

Overview

The one thing you need to know: Lenovo put a workstation-class CPU in this tower and then saddled it with a graphics card that belongs in a budget office PC. The Intel Core Ultra 7 265 is a 20-core monster that chews through multi-threaded work like it's nothing. But the RTX A400 with 4GB of VRAM is a cruel joke for anyone doing CAD, rendering, or AI workloads. This combo is baffling.

Build quality is classic ThinkStation, solid as a tank and heavy enough to prove it. The port selection is excellent, with Wi-Fi 7 and enough USB and DisplayPort connections to drive a small command center. Windows 11 Pro and 32GB of DDR5 RAM round out a strong starting spec. But that GPU choice overshadows everything else.

Performance

The benchmark numbers tell a weird story. The CPU sits in the 89th percentile, one of the best we've tested in workstation towers. It handles compiling code, running virtual machines, and heavy office multitasking without breaking a sweat. But the GPU? Dead center at the 50th percentile, and that's only because plenty of integrated graphics drag the average down. In our database, the RTX A400 is basically a display adapter with a fancy name. You'll get smooth 2D performance and maybe some light photo editing, but any 3D rendering or GPU-accelerated task will have you staring at progress bars. The 32GB of DDR5 RAM is well above average (82nd percentile) and feels generous, though the 512GB NVMe drive is a weak spot at the 40th percentile. Storage is tight for a workstation, and you'll fill it up faster than you'd think.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 88.8
GPU 50
RAM 82.1
Ports 90
Storage 40
Reliability 71.6

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • 20-core Core Ultra 7 is an absolute powerhouse 90th
  • Top-notch connectivity with Wi-Fi 7 and a heap of ports 89th
  • 32GB DDR5 RAM is a nice head start 82th
  • Rock-solid build quality typical of ThinkStations 72th

Cons

  • RTX A400 GPU is a bottleneck for any serious GPU work
  • 512GB storage is cramped for a workstation
  • 500W PSU limits future GPU upgrade headroom
  • Heavy 9.67kg chassis is a bear to move around

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core Ultra 7 265
Cores 20
Frequency 2.4 GHz
L3 Cache 30 MB

Graphics

GPU NVIDIA RTX A400
Type discrete
VRAM 4 GB
VRAM Type GDDR6

Memory & Storage

RAM 32 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type NVMe SSD

Build

Form Factor mid-tower
PSU 500
Weight 9.7 kg / 21.3 lbs

Connectivity

USB-C Ports 1
USB Ports 8
HDMI 4x DisplayPort 1.4a1x DisplayPort
DisplayPort 4x DisplayPort 1.4a1x DisplayPort
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 7
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.4
Ethernet Gigabit Ethernet

System

OS Windows 11 Pro

Value & Pricing

Pricing is all over the place, with vendors asking anywhere from $989 to over $3000. At the low end, you're getting a great CPU and decent RAM for the money, even if the GPU is a throwaway. At $3000, you're being taken for a ride. If you can snag this around $1000 and you already have a better GPU to drop in, it's a solid foundation. Otherwise, the value proposition falls apart fast. Shop carefully, the price spread is huge, and the cheapest listing could save you over $2000.

vs Competition

If you're considering this for a work PC, the Apple Mac mini M4 is a compelling alternative at a similar price for CPU-bound tasks and sips power, but it can't match the P2's expandability and port selection. Among the gaming desktops on our list, the ASUS ROG GM700TZ and HP Omen GT22 ship with far superior GPUs for less money in some configs, but they lack the workstation pedigree and reliability certifications. Honestly, this ThinkStation's biggest enemy is itself. The GPU choice makes it a tough recommendation unless you plan to DIY, and then the Dell XPS or MSI Aegis start looking smarter if you want a prebuilt with a decent GPU out of the box.

Spec Lenovo ThinkStation P2 Tower Gen 2 ASUS Republic of Gamers GM700TZ-BS978 HP Omen GT22 Dell XPS EBT2250 Apple Mac mini M4 MSI Aegis RS2 Aegis RS2 AI
CPU Intel Core Ultra 7 265 AMD Ryzen 9 9950X Intel Core Ultra 9 285K Intel Core Ultra 7 265 Apple M4 Intel Core Ultra 7 265K
RAM (GB) 32 64 64 32 16 32
Storage (GB) 512 2048 8192 2048 256 2048
GPU NVIDIA RTX A400 AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 Apple M4 10-core NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070
Form Factor mid-tower mid-tower mid-tower mid-tower mini mid-tower
Psu W 500 850 - 460 - 750
OS Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Pro macOS Sequoia 15.1 Windows 11 Home
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortStorageReliability
Lenovo ThinkStation P2 Tower Gen 2 88.85082.1904071.6
ASUS Republic of Gamers GM700TZ-BS978 Compare 98.877.394.197.491.139.8
HP Omen GT22 Compare 97.888.395.49899.371.6
Dell XPS EBT2250 Compare 88.869.47879.683.871.6
Apple Mac mini M4 Compare 55.495.429.296.812.899.3
MSI Aegis RS2 Aegis RS2 AI Compare 95.981.387.596.683.839.8

Common Questions

Q: Can I do CAD or 3D modeling with this out of the box?

Barely. The CPU can handle the computation, but the RTX A400 will choke on anything beyond simple wireframes. Plan on upgrading the GPU immediately.

Q: Is the RAM and storage upgradeable?

Yes, the mid-tower case makes adding more RAM or swapping the SSD a breeze. You'll want to, given the small stock drive.

Q: Does it support multiple monitors?

Absolutely, with four DisplayPort 1.4a outputs and additional ports, you can run a multi-display setup easily, just don't expect those monitors to run GPU-heavy apps smoothly.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a ready-to-go workstation for rendering, AI, or CAD, this isn't it. Go get a Dell Precision or HP Z tower with a proper RTX A2000 or higher instead. And if you're a gamer, skip entirely, the A400 is useless for gaming. This machine is only for office productivity warriors who can live with integrated-level graphics.

Verdict

The Lenovo ThinkStation P2 Tower Gen 2 is a confusing machine. The CPU is fantastic, the build is tank-like, and the connectivity is stellar. But the GPU is a dealbreaker for most workstation users. Unless you're buying it purely for CPU-intensive tasks and will never need graphical horsepower, you're better off looking elsewhere or mentally adding the cost of a GPU upgrade on day one. We can only recommend this if you find it at the bottom of that wild price range and you already have an RTX 4000 Ada or similar ready to slot in.

Usage Scores

Overall (78.5)Gaming (63.6)Compact (35)Creator (68.5)Business (82.9)Developer (77.7)Home Office (80.3)Workstation (80.9)