Lenovo Yoga Lenovo 12.2" 500e Yoga Gen 4 32GB Multi-Touch Review

The Yoga 500e Gen 4 is one of the most portable laptops you can buy, but its 4GB of RAM and 32GB storage make it painfully slow for anything beyond basic web browsing.

CPU Intel Processor N100
RAM 4 GB
Storage 32 GB
Screen 12.2" 1920x1200
GPU Intel UHD Graphics
OS Chrome OS
Weight 1.3 kg
Battery 47 Wh
Lenovo Yoga Lenovo 12.2" 500e Yoga Gen 4 32GB Multi-Touch laptop
22.3 Punteggio Complessivo

Overview

Let's be clear about what this is. The Lenovo Yoga 500e Gen 4 is a Chromebook, and it's built for one thing: being a cheap, portable machine for basic tasks. Its 96th percentile compact score means it's one of the lightest, most portable devices you can find, and its 75th percentile reliability rating suggests it's built to survive a backpack. But the numbers also tell the other half of the story. With an 8th percentile CPU and 4th percentile RAM, you're looking at the absolute bottom of the performance barrel. This isn't a laptop for work, it's a laptop for web browsing and Google Docs.

Performance

Performance is exactly what you'd expect from an Intel N100 processor and 4GB of RAM. That CPU score in the 8th percentile means it's slower than 92% of other laptops. It can handle a dozen Chrome tabs, but you'll feel it chug if you try to run a video call and a document side-by-side. The 32GB of storage is in the 5th percentile, which is barely enough for the OS and a few apps. Gaming is a non-starter, with a 2.3/100 score. The one bright spot is the screen. At 12.2 inches with a 1920x1200 resolution and 300 nits, it's decently sharp and bright for the price, landing right in the middle of the pack at the 49th percentile.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 6.1
GPU 45.2
RAM 5.3
Ports 60
Screen 64.6
Portability 97
Storage 7.7
Reliability 74.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Extremely portable. Its 1.32kg weight and compact design score in the 96th percentile. 97th
  • Solid build reliability. It's rated in the 75th percentile for durability, which is great for students. 74th
  • Good connectivity for the class. WiFi 6E and an HDMI port are nice touches at this price.
  • The 12.2" 1920x1200 touchscreen is surprisingly decent, hitting the 49th percentile for screen quality.

Cons

  • Severely underpowered. The Intel N100 CPU sits in the 8th percentile. 5th
  • Not enough RAM. 4GB is in the 4th percentile and will bottleneck even basic multitasking. 6th
  • Tiny storage. 32GB is in the 5th percentile. You'll be living in the cloud. 8th
  • Battery life is likely mediocre. The 47Wh cell is small, and efficiency isn't this chip's strong suit.
  • Not for any real work. Its business and student suitability scores are both below 26/100.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Processor N100
Cores 4
Frequency 100 MHz
L3 Cache 6 MB

Graphics

GPU UHD Graphics
Type integrated
VRAM Type Shared

Memory & Storage

RAM 4 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 32 GB
Storage Type SSD

Display

Size 12.2"
Resolution 1920 (Full HD)
Panel IPS
Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Brightness 300 nits
Color Gamut 50% NTSC

Connectivity

HDMI 1x HDMI 1.4 Output
Wi-Fi WiFi 6E
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.1

Physical

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

Value & Pricing

At $370 to $389, this Chromebook is fighting in the budget basement. You're paying for the Yoga brand, the touchscreen, and the portability. For pure specs per dollar, it's a tough sell because that 4GB of RAM and 32GB storage are cripplingly low, even at this price. You're trading all performance for a compact form factor. If you need Windows or more power, even a used business laptop around $400 will run circles around it.

vs Competition

Comparing this to the 'top competitors' listed is almost funny. They're in a different universe. The MacBook Pro M4 or an MSI Vector HX are performance monsters. A real comparison is against other budget Chromebooks. Here, the 500e's advantage is its high portability and reliability scores. But you have to ask if that's worth the rock-bottom RAM and storage. A similarly priced Acer Chromebook might offer 8GB of RAM and 64GB storage, sacrificing a bit of build quality for much more usable specs. That's the trade-off.

Spec Lenovo Yoga Lenovo 12.2" 500e Yoga Gen 4 32GB Multi-Touch Apple MacBook Pro Apple 14" MacBook Pro (M5, Silver) ASUS ROG Zephyrus ASUS - ROG Zephyrus G14 14" 3K OLED 120Hz Gaming Lenovo Legion Lenovo Legion Pro 5i Gen 10 Intel Laptop, MSI Creator MSI Creator M14 A13V A13VF-081US 14" 2.8K Laptop, HP ZBook HP 14" ZBook Ultra G1a Multi-Touch Mobile
CPU Intel Processor N100 Apple M5 AMD Ryzen AI 300 Series Intel Core Ultra 7 255HX Intel Core i7 13620H AMD Ryzen AI Max+ Pro 395
RAM (GB) 4 32 32 16 32 128
Storage (GB) 32 4096 1000 1024 2048 2048
Screen 12.2" 1920x1200 14.2" 3024x1964 14" 2880x1800 16" 2560x1600 14" 2880x1800 14" 2880x1800
GPU Intel UHD Graphics Apple (10-Core) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 AMD Radeon
OS Chrome OS macOS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home (MSI recommends Windows 11 Pro for business) Windows 11 Pro
Weight (kg) 1.3 1.5 1.6 0.5 1.6 2.5
Battery (Wh) 47 72 - 80 - 74
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Verdict

This is a very specific tool for a very specific job. If you need the absolute most portable, durable device possible for under $400 and your entire workflow lives in a Chrome browser, the Yoga 500e Gen 4 makes sense. For literally anyone else—students needing more than 5 tabs open, people who want to install more than two Android apps, or anyone who values performance—the 4GB RAM and 32GB storage are immediate deal-breakers. The data is clear: buy this only if portability is your #1 and only priority.