Lenovo’s leaked Copilot+ Legion laptops sound less like a raw power grab and more like an attempt to make gaming laptops easier to live with. According to a Windows Latest report, Lenovo is preparing new Legion 7a and Legion 5a models for a CES 2026 reveal, built around unannounced AMD Ryzen AI 400 series processors and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50-series Laptop GPUs.

The idea is Lenovo AI Engine+ working with Legion Space to adjust power, fan speed, and efficiency in real time. The pitch, as described in the leak, is that you would spend less time tweaking profiles when you bounce between gaming, streaming, and creator work.

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This is still unofficial though. The same report claims a January CES announcement in Las Vegas, with availability likely starting in April 2026, plus a wide price spread from $1,299 to $1,999 depending on the model.

The leak’s AI tuning proof

The Legion 7a is listed with up to a Ryzen AI 9 HX 470 (and a Ryzen AI 9 465 option), plus up to an RTX 5060 Laptop GPU with 8GB of GDDR7. The GPU is described at 115W with a 15W boost, alongside a claimed 572 AI TOPS figure.

Lenovo’s onboard AI chips also show up here: LA1 plus LA4 on the Legion 7a, and LA1 plus LA3 on the Legion 5a. The leak also admits an important unknown, it’s not clear if Windows 11 AI experiences can actually use the RTX 5060’s AI throughput the way the marketing would suggest.

OLED, thin builds, and the $500 gap

Lenovo is reportedly chasing thinner, lighter builds while keeping premium screens. The Legion 7a is described with a 16-inch 16:10 PureSight OLED panel (2560 x 1600) that runs up to 240Hz with VRR and 100% DCI-P3 color. The Legion 5a keeps OLED too, but drops to a 15.3-inch 165Hz panel, which is an easy way to separate the tiers.

Price does the rest. The leak claims the Legion 7a starts at $1,999, while the Legion 5a (Ryzen AI 400 series) starts at $1,499. There’s also a cheaper Legion 5a with a Ryzen 7 250 listed at $1,299, and an Intel-based Legion 5i pegged at $1,549.

What to watch at CES 2026

If Lenovo actually announces these, the key demo will be whether AI Engine+ makes a real difference under load. It needs to respond quickly, avoid wild fan swings, and keep performance stable during long gaming sessions.

For anyone shopping in early 2026, treat these details as a checklist until Lenovo confirms pricing, configs, and what Copilot+ features are supported on day one.

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