Lenovo IdeaPad 3i 15.6" Review

The Lenovo Ideapad 3i offers a 15-inch touchscreen for just $305, but its slow performance and limited storage make it a tough sell for anyone but the most budget-conscious buyer.

CPU i3-1115G
RAM 8 GB
Storage 256 GB
Screen 15.6" 1920x1080
Lenovo IdeaPad 3i 15.6" laptop
40.3 Puntuación global

Overview

Look, this is a cheap laptop. That's the one thing to know. For just over $300, you get a 15-inch touchscreen laptop that can handle basic web browsing, emails, and documents. It's fine for that. But the moment you try to push it, you'll feel the compromises. The reliability score is decent, but almost everything else is in the bottom half of the pack, which tells you exactly what you're getting.

Performance

Don't expect any surprises here, good or bad. The Intel CPU and integrated graphics land in the 24th and 18th percentiles, so it's slow. Opening a dozen browser tabs will make it think hard. It scored a 6.8 for gaming, which basically means it can't game at all. It does what it's built for, which is very light tasks, and not much else.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 29.9
GPU 19.9
RAM 17
Ports 8.9
Screen 25.4
Portability 39.5
Storage 27.1
Reliability 74.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The price is incredibly low for a 15-inch touchscreen. 75th
  • Reliability is surprisingly solid for the cost.
  • The 1080p screen is fine for watching videos.
  • It's a simple machine that gets basic jobs done.

Cons

  • The performance is weak across the board. 9th
  • Only 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage feels cramped. 17th
  • The screen quality is in the bottom 20% of laptops. 20th
  • Port selection is very limited. 25th

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU i3-1115G

Memory & Storage

RAM 8 GB
Storage 256 GB
Storage Type SSD

Display

Size 15.6"
Resolution 1920 (Full HD)

Value & Pricing

At $305, it's hard to complain too much. You're paying for a screen and a keyboard that turns on. It's worth it only if your budget is absolutely fixed and your needs are incredibly basic. If you can stretch your budget by even $100, you'll get a much better machine.

vs Competition

This sits in a different universe than the MacBook Pro or gaming laptops on the competitor list. A more relevant comparison is with used or refurbished business laptops. For a similar price, you could find a used Lenovo ThinkPad with a better keyboard, more ports, and often better build quality, though you might lose the touchscreen. The ASUS Zenbook Duo is also in a different league entirely, offering dual screens for creative work. This Ideapad is strictly for new-in-box, bargain-basement shopping.

Verdict

Only buy this if your top priority is getting the biggest new touchscreen for the absolute lowest price, and you don't care about speed, storage, or future-proofing. For everyone else, especially students who need to multitask, save up a little more. This laptop won't age well, and you'll feel its limits quickly.