The Legion Tower 7i Gen 10 uses a Micro-ATX form factor and occupies a total volume of 41,803.531 cm³, with physical dimensions of 477.4 mm in height, 211 mm in width, and 415 mm in depth. Storage is handled by a 2TB NVMe SSD, offering a fast solid-state solution for both the operating system and installed applications.
The graphics card features 16GB of GDDR7 VRAM across a 256-bit memory bus, delivering a maximum memory bandwidth of 960 GB/s and an effective memory speed of 30,000 MHz. Its 10,752 shading units, 336 texture mapping units, and 112 render output units contribute to a texture rate of 880 GTexels/s and a pixel rate of 293.4 GPixel/s, while overall compute throughput reaches 56.34 TFLOPS of floating-point performance. The GPU operates at a base clock of 2,300 MHz with a turbo frequency of 2,620 MHz, and is built on a 5 nm process housing 45,600 million transistors. It connects via PCIe 5 and supports DirectX 12 Ultimate, OpenGL 4.6, OpenCL 3, ray tracing, DLSS, double precision floating point, stereoscopic 3D, and multi-display output across up to four screens. The card does not include RGB lighting or LHR restrictions.
The processor runs across 20 threads with a configuration of 8 cores at 3.9 GHz and 12 cores at 3.3 GHz, reaching a turbo clock speed of 5.5 GHz via Turbo Boost version 2 and a clock multiplier of 39. It includes integrated graphics and an unlocked multiplier, and supports 64-bit processing with a maximum rated temperature of 105 °C. Cache is split between 36 MB of L2 and 30 MB of L3, providing substantial on-chip memory for frequently accessed data. The CPU does not use multithreading.
In PassMark testing, the system achieves a multi-core score of 58,780 and a single-core score of 4,925, with the overclocked result climbing to 61,016, reflecting the modest but measurable gain available when the processor is pushed beyond its default clock settings.
The system is equipped with 32GB of DDR5 RAM running at a speed of 5600 MHz, providing a solid foundation for handling memory-intensive workloads and modern gaming workloads alike.
Wireless connectivity covers Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) along with Wi-Fi 6E, 6, 5, and 4, complemented by Bluetooth 5.4. For wired networking there is one RJ45 port, and the USB lineup includes three USB 2.0 ports, four USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A ports, one USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A port, one USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C port, and one USB 4 40Gbps port, while USB 4 20Gbps, USB 3.2 Gen 2x2, and USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-C ports are absent. A single Thunderbolt 4 port is present, though there is no Thunderbolt 3. Display outputs consist of three DisplayPort connections and one HDMI 2.1b port, with no DVI or VGA. Audio connectivity is covered by a 3.5 mm headset jack and an S/PDIF output.
The desktop CPU sits in an LGA 1851 socket and is compatible with B860 and Z890 chipsets, operating with a thermal design power of 360W and employing big.LITTLE technology for its core configuration. The processor supports a broad set of instruction sets including MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, AVX, AVX2, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2, along with an NX bit for hardware-level security. Memory support extends to a maximum of 192GB across two channels, with RAM speeds reaching up to 6400 MHz, and ECC memory is also supported. The GPU is based on the Blackwell architecture and benefits from Intel Resizable BAR, while the system includes an HDMI output but no mini DisplayPort or USB-C ports. Air-water cooling and XeSS (XMX) are not present on this configuration.