Lenovo Yoga 300e Chromebook Gen 4 11.6" HD 2-In-1 Review

The Lenovo 300e Chromebook is built for survival, not speed. With only 4GB of RAM and storage, it's a one-trick pony that most people should avoid.

CPU MediaTek Kompanio 520 (8C, 2x A76 @2.05GHz + 6x A55 @2.0GHz)
RAM 4 GB
Storage 32 GB
Screen 11.6" 1366x768
GPU Integrated ARM Mali-G52 2EE MC2 GPU
OS Chrome OS
Weight 1.3 kg
Battery 47 Wh
Lenovo Yoga 300e Chromebook Gen 4 11.6" HD 2-In-1 laptop
16.9 Genel Puan

Overview

Look, this isn't a laptop for everyone. It's a Chromebook, and a very basic one at that. The one thing you need to know is that this is a single-purpose machine for a very specific user. It's built like a tank for a classroom, it's super compact, and it runs Chrome OS. That's it. If you need to check email, browse the web, and use Google Docs on a device that can survive being dropped by a kid, this might be your pick. But if you need to do literally anything else, keep scrolling.

Performance

Honestly, nothing about the performance surprised me. It's exactly as slow as the specs suggest. With a CPU in the 23rd percentile and only 4GB of RAM, you'll feel it. Opening more than a handful of browser tabs will make it chug. The 4GB of eMMC storage is a joke in 2024, and the 1366x768 screen is dim and low-res. The only surprise is how well it's built, landing in the 98th percentile for compactness and 75th for reliability. It feels solid, which is its one saving grace.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 29.9
GPU 19.9
RAM 2.7
Ports 39.9
Screen 5.2
Portability 98.1
Storage 11
Reliability 74.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Built like a little tank. It feels incredibly durable for the price. 98th
  • Super portable and lightweight. Easy to toss in a bag. 75th
  • Chrome OS is simple and secure, perfect for its intended use.
  • The 2-in-1 hinge and touchscreen add a bit of flexibility.

Cons

  • The performance is painfully slow. 4GB of RAM and a weak CPU just don't cut it. 3th
  • The storage is a tragedy. 4GB eMMC is barely enough for the OS itself. 5th
  • The screen is awful. It's low resolution and not great to look at. 11th
  • Port selection is minimal, and battery life is a complete unknown, which is never a good sign. 20th

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU MediaTek Kompanio 520 (8C, 2x A76 @2.05GHz + 6x A55 @2.0GHz)

Graphics

GPU Integrated ARM Mali-G52 2EE MC2 GPU
Type integrated

Memory & Storage

RAM 4 GB
RAM Generation DDR4
Storage 32 GB
Storage Type eMMC

Display

Size 11.6"
Resolution 1366

Connectivity

Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.1

Physical

Weight 1.3 kg / 2.9 lbs
Battery 47 Wh
OS Chrome OS

Value & Pricing

At $325, it's cheap, but it's not a good value. You're paying for durability, not performance. For the same money, you could find a used or refurbished Windows laptop with twice the RAM and storage that would actually be usable. This only makes sense if your absolute top priority is a nearly indestructible device for a child's schoolwork.

vs Competition

Forget comparing this to the MacBook Pro or gaming laptops on the list. That's like comparing a bicycle to a sports car. A more relevant competitor would be something like the ASUS Chromebook Flip, which often offers better screens and performance for a similar price. Even other budget Windows 2-in-1s, like older Lenovo Flex models, provide a much more capable and versatile experience for everyday tasks without the extreme limitations of Chrome OS and these specs.

Verdict

I can only recommend this to one person: a parent or school district buying in bulk for young students who need a device that can survive daily abuse and run a browser. For literally anyone else—students doing real research, adults needing a secondary laptop, people on a tight budget—this is a hard pass. Its limitations are too severe. Spend a bit more or buy used to get something you won't immediately regret.