Yoga Tab Makes Laptops Look Less Practical, Lenovo Bundles Keyboard and Stylus Free

Lenovo is pushing the Yoga Tab as more than a tablet for entertainment. At a starting point of Rp8 jutaan, the device is aimed at mobile productivity users who want something lighter and simpler to carry than an entry-level laptop.

The biggest appeal is what comes in the box. Lenovo includes a Lenovo Pen Pro and a Keyboard Case Pack at no extra cost, and the keyboard also comes with a trackpad that supports multi-finger gestures.

Thin metal build with a premium feel

Yoga Tab uses a full-metal body in Silver Dove, giving it a clean, understated look. It measures just 6.2 mm thick and weighs 458 grams, making it easier to hold with one hand and less tiring to bring around.

Desktop-like work features

For light office tasks, Lenovo adds a built-in Desktop Mode with split screen, floating windows, and the ability to run multiple apps at once in a more organized layout. That makes the experience feel closer to a laptop than a typical tablet.

Lenovo also leans on software support for productivity and creativity. CapCut is optimized for tablets, while Adobe Express and Lightroom Mobile are offered with a 3-month trial.

Big, sharp display and strong audio

The tablet is equipped with a 3.2K Pure Pro display and an adaptive 144 Hz refresh rate. Brightness reaches 800 nits, and color coverage is listed at 98% DCI-P3, which should help with photo and video editing.

The visual experience is paired with four built-in speakers. Lenovo says the audio quality is close to what users get from premium Yoga laptops, strengthening the tablet’s role as both a media device and a work machine.

Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 performance and gaming results

Under the hood, Yoga Tab runs on Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 with 12GB of RAM and 256GB of storage. Even though it is not the newest flagship chipset in mid-2026, performance remains at a premium level for everyday use.

Gaming tests showed an interesting pattern with refresh rates. At first, most games were locked to 60 Hz, but switching to PC Mode allowed titles such as Mobile Legends to run at 120 Hz more smoothly.

During a 30-minute test session, Mobile Legends averaged 107 FPS with a temperature of 35°C and a 10% battery drop. PUBG Mobile posted an average of 87 FPS, while Genshin Impact stayed almost free of frame drops at 59 FPS.

Wuthering Waves was the heaviest workload in the test. The game averaged 45 FPS, the temperature climbed to 46°C, and battery consumption reached 18%.

Battery and connectivity trade-offs

The Yoga Tab carries an 8,860 mAh battery, but power use rises noticeably when the large 3.2K display is pushed with high graphics settings. That makes it better suited to on-the-go productivity than long gaming sessions.

Lenovo also makes some clear compromises. The tablet uses a 16:10 display ratio, does not include a SIM card slot, and relies entirely on Wi-Fi connectivity.

Even so, the bundled keyboard, stylus, and 1-year ADP One accidental damage protection help it stand out in its class. For users who want a portable device that can act like a laptop when needed, the Yoga Tab is built to make that switch easier.

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