Lenovo is preparing to expand its Legion tablet lineup with two new Android models that are both set to appear on 19 May. The devices are the Legion Y900 11 and Legion Y900 13, and both are positioned as successors to the earlier Legion Y900 generation.
What stands out is that Lenovo is no longer sticking to a single size strategy. By offering two variants, the company appears to be targeting users who want a large-screen tablet with more flexibility, while also pushing the Legion line closer to a PC-like experience.
A larger, more flexible Legion direction
The two tablets belong to the same family, but they are aimed at slightly different usage needs. That split gives Lenovo a broader way to reach people who want a device for entertainment, light work, or more serious productivity tasks.
According to the promotional material cited by Notebookcheck, both tablets will ship with a keyboard case. That accessory matters because it makes the devices feel less like standard Android tablets and more like products that can take on laptop-style roles in certain scenarios.
Keyboard case pushes the PC-like message
Lenovo seems to be highlighting the keyboard case as part of the core experience, not just an optional add-on. That choice fits the Legion brand, which is usually associated with performance-focused products and a more aggressive identity than mainstream tablets.
With keyboard support in place, the Y900 series is clearly being framed for users who want a large display and a fuller input setup. In practical terms, that means the tablets can move beyond media consumption and into typing, working, and other tasks that are often easier on a PC-like device.
Stylus support and camera differences
One confirmed detail from the official material is stylus support on the Legion Y900 11. That opens the door to note-taking, drawing, and other precise input tasks that benefit from pen support.
The Legion Y900 13 has not been explicitly shown with stylus support yet, although the same report suggests that the larger model may also support a stylus. Lenovo has not confirmed that detail.
The rear camera setup also appears different between the two models. The Legion Y900 13 is shown with two rear cameras in the official images, while earlier leaks this month suggested that the Legion Y900 11 may come with only one rear camera. Lenovo has not explained the purpose of those sensors, so it is still unclear whether the difference is purely about quantity or also about imaging capability.
Key hardware details remain hidden
Even though the launch date is already known, Lenovo has been quiet about the core specifications of both tablets. The company has not revealed the chipset, battery capacity, display size, or memory configurations for the Legion Y900 11 and Legion Y900 13.
That leaves the 19 May announcement as the main moment to see how far Lenovo intends to push the Legion tablet concept. So far, the visible strategy has focused less on raw specs and more on accessories and versatility.
Positioned above the Legion Y700 lineup
The new Y900 models are also arriving shortly after Lenovo introduced the Legion Y700 (Gen 5). Based on the same report, the Y900 family will be larger than that model, which helps define a clearer split inside Lenovo’s gaming tablet portfolio.
The Legion Y700 can appeal to users who prefer something more compact, while the Legion Y900 11 and Y900 13 are aimed at those who want a bigger display and a more laptop-like setup. That separation suggests Lenovo is trying to cover both portability and wide-screen productivity within the Legion category.
Global availability is still uncertain
One unresolved question is whether the two new tablets will go beyond the China market. At this stage, there is no confirmation that the Legion Y900 11 and Legion Y900 13 will receive a global release in the same way as the Legion Y700 (Gen 5), which is sold outside China as the Legion Tab Gen 5.
The possibility remains open, however. Notebookcheck notes that the previous Legion Y900 generation reached international markets under the Lenovo Tab Extreme name, so a similar renaming approach could happen again.
For now, the clearest confirmed points are the two model names, the two size options, the keyboard case, stylus support on the Legion Y900 11, and the camera layout differences. The full picture will likely become clearer once Lenovo makes its official announcement on 19 May.
