Measuring 7.6 pounds, 16.6 x 11.4 x 1.0 inches, the Y70 is slim, but not as slim as the Aorus X7 (7.2 pounds, 16.8 x 12.0 x 0.9 inches). Both the MSI GS70 Stealth Pro (6 pounds, 16.5 x 11.3 x 0.85 inches) and the Maingear Pulse (6.2 pounds, 16.5 x 11.3 x 0.85 inches) are even thinner and lighter.
The Y70 Touch skated past the 275-nit desktop replacement average for brightness, scoring 277 nits. That was enough to top the Aorus' 264 nits, but not the GS70 (281 nits) or the Pulse 17 (300 nits).
The 70 Touch got a perfect 100 percent on the sRGB Gamut, which means it can display a wide variety of shades. The Maingear and the MSI fell somewhat short of that mark, at 90 and 89 percent. The Aorus hit 102 percent.
The colors really popped as I played through Middle-Earth: Shadow of Mordor. Rock faces seamlessly transitioned from gray to rust red, signaling different rock sediment. The game looked its best when the scalded mountains gave way to the vibrant green pastures.. I couldn't help but marvel at the Blue Milk fungus, with its cerulean caps that puckered boldly in the center as they sat on their stout white stalks.
The Y70 Touch registered 2.5 on the Delta-E color accuracy test (0 is best). Once again, the Lenovo beat out the Stealth Pro and the Pulse 17, which notched 8.4 and 9.4. However, the Aorus came out on top with a score of 1.
It was all sword strikes and battle cries when I switched to Shadow of Mordor. As I traveled the countryside, I enjoyed the persistent traveling music, whose strings became harsh and frenzied when I encountered an enemy. It was the perfect backdrop for the arrows and axes whizzing past my head as I worked to dispatch hordes of screaming Uruk-hai.
I listened to Jill Scott's "He Loves Me (Lyzel in E Flat)" and found myself awash in gloriously swelling violins, a punchy organ and sharp snares. It was the perfect melodic bedding for the artist's alto, gently rising and falling like an aural tide as the song progressed.
The keys registered 1.7mm of key travel (1.5-2mm is considered good) with 60 grams of actuation. That translated into a comfortable typing experience with strong tactile feedback. I hit my usual 55 words per minute on the Ten Thumbs Typing Test.
After 15 minutes of fighting my way around Mordor, the touchpad measured 81 degrees. The space between the G and H keys registered 99 degrees. The bottom of the laptop was slightly cooler at 93 degrees.
The finer points of the picture, such as the small pockmarks in the wall or the flyaway strands of hair, were lost.
When I played through Shadow of Mordor with the settings on very high, I saw an average frame rate of 30.1 fps. That's playable, but it wasn't the prettiest presentation. I noticed texture tears as I traversed throughout the world. The worst offenders were the orcs, as I noticed that some had holes in their faces where the rendering failed. I also noticed quite a bit of lag when I was engaged in battle, particularly if I was fighting more than two Uruk-hai at a time.
None of the laptops cleared the 62 fps average on high. The Y70 hit 42 fps while the Aorus notched 35 fps. The Pulse 17 and Stealth Pro posted 52 and 53 fps, respectively.
During the Metro: Last Light test, the Y70 achieved 68 fps at 1080p, matching the Aorus, but missing the 75 fps mark. The Stealth Pro and Pulse 17 were tied at 70 fps. The Y70 Touch's frame rate plummeted to an unplayable 16 fps on maximum settings, which is below the 24 fps average. However, neither the Pulse 17 nor Stealth Pro were that far ahead with 14 and 17 fps. The Aorus was only two frames short of the average, at 22 fps.
When I took a break from gaming to watch a video or write this review, the laptop switched over to its Intel HD Graphics 4600 GPU. This is designed to save battery life.
For example, on Geekbench 3, which measures overall performance, the Y70 Touch scored 9,837. The MSI GS70 Stealth Pro, which has the same processor, delivered 13.034 on the same test. However, that much pricier $2,009 system also benefits from a beefier Nvidia 880 GPU and dual SSDs.
The Y70 Touch's 1TB 5,400-rpm hard drive and 8GB SSD took 2 minutes and 55 seconds to duplicate 4.97GB of mixed-media files, which is a transfer rate of 29 MBps. That's much slower than the 317.3 MBps desktop replacement average. The Pulse 17 delivered a blood-pumping 391 MBps, but the Aorus and Stealth Pro were even faster at 565 MBps and 566 MBps, respectively.
On the OpenOffice Spreadsheet Macro test, the Y70 Touch matched 20,000 names and addresses in 3 minutes and 54 seconds, beating the 4:43 average. The Stealth Pro was just a hair faster, clocking 3:53, but the Aorus was the hands-down winner with 3:47. The Maingear took 3:59.
Some newcomers to the Lenovo suite are PhotoMaster, which enables you to edit photos, employing blemish-removing beautifying effects or Instagram-reminiscent filters. You can also add a voice memo to add an audio component to the still.
Lenovo Reach, the company's beta cloud service, acts like a virtual desktop. It allows access to documents, music and photos across devices, including PC, Mac, Android and iOS. Reach also enables users to launch apps like Hulu or Netfilx without installing them on their device. Instead, these services stream from a Lenovo server.
Company branded software includes Companion, Support, Settings, Photos, Energy Manager, Motion Control and One Key Recovery -- just in case you run into an inadvertent blue screen of death.
Third-party apps include Evernote Touch, Kindle, Zinio, eBay, the Weather Channel and McAFee Central.
The $1,399 base model features a 2.5-GHz Intel Core i7-4710HQ CPU, 8GB of RAM, a 1TB 5,400-rpm hard drive with a 8GB SSHD, an Intel HD Graphics 4600 GPU and a Nvidia GeForce GTX 860M GPU with 2GB of VRAM.
Lenovo also offers a $1,749 version that has a 2.5-GHz Intel Core i7-4710HQ processor with 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD, an Intel HD Graphics 4600 GPU and a Nvidia GeForce GTX 860M GPU with 4GB of VRAM. We highly recommend the SSD config for gamers.
Those searching for more power will want to save up for either the MSI GS70 Stealth Pro ($2,009) or the Maingear Pulse 17 ($2,299), which deliver better performance and battery life. But if you want to play the latest titles and you're on a tighter budget, the Y70 will satisfy your fragging urges.
What's In The Box
Whats in the box
Power adaptor and cord
Tech Specs
Processor
- Up to Intel® Core™ i7 processor
- Operating System- Windows 8.1 64
- Memory- 8.0 GB
- Graphics- NVIDIA® GeForce GTX 860M GDDR5 2GB
- Display- 17.3" FHD LED AntiGlare multi-touch with integrated camera (1920x1080)
- Dimensions (W x D x H)- 16.64" x 11.44" x 1.02"
- Weight- 7.5 lbs with 4-cell battery
- Keyboard- Backlit AccuType® keyboard
- Webcam- 720p
- Hard Drive- 1TB 5400 RPM+8GB SSHD
- Audio- Dolby® Advanced Audio v2
- Battery- Up to 5 hours
- Bluetooth®- Bluetooth® 4.0(Optional), 802.11 a/c WiFi, 1G LAN
- Ports- 2 x USB 3.0, 1 x USB 2.0, 4-in-1 card reader (SD, MMC, SDXC, SDHC), HDMI, SPDIF, RJ45, Audio Combo Jack
The Pros
Affordable; Colorful full HD display; Loud, balanced audio; Good graphics and overall performance for price; Runs cool and quiet
The Cons
Below-average battery life; Slow mechanical hard drive
Verdict
The Lenovo Y70 delivers midrange gaming performance with a vivid display and great audio, but don't expect long battery life
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