At the core, these two tablets are essentially identical from a silicon standpoint — both run the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset built on a 3 nm process, pair it with an Adreno 830 GPU, and post the exact same benchmark scores: 10,059 multi-core and 3,234 single-core on Geekbench 6. CPU configuration, clock speeds, GPU clocks, memory bandwidth, and storage are all identical. In practice, this means neither device will outrun the other in raw processing tasks, game frame rates, or GPU-intensive workloads.
The sole differentiator in this category is RAM. The Lenovo Legion Y700 (Gen 4) ships with 16 GB, while the ZTE RedMagic Astra comes equipped with 24 GB — a 50% increase that matters more than it might first appear on a gaming tablet. More RAM allows the system to keep a greater number of apps, game assets, and background processes resident in memory simultaneously, reducing reload times and enabling smoother multitasking. For heavy users who run demanding titles alongside streaming, voice chat, or recording applications, that extra headroom provides a tangible quality-of-life benefit over extended sessions.
The verdict here is straightforward: on raw compute performance, these tablets are a dead heat. But the RedMagic Astra's 24 GB of RAM gives it a meaningful practical edge for memory-intensive use cases, making it the stronger performer for users who push their tablet hard across multiple simultaneous workloads.