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Reading: Lenovo Showcases AI-Driven PCs, Tablets, Gaming Gear, and Phones at IFA 2025
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Lenovo Showcases AI-Driven PCs, Tablets, Gaming Gear, and Phones at IFA 2025

GEEK STAFF
GEEK STAFF
Sep 5, 2025

At IFA 2025, Lenovo used its Innovation World event in Berlin to showcase one of its broadest product refreshes in recent years, spanning PCs, tablets, gaming hardware, and smartphones—all built around what it calls “Smarter AI for All.” The message was clear: AI isn’t just for research labs or enterprise clients anymore. Lenovo wants it embedded across devices for work, play, and everyday use.

On the business side, Lenovo highlighted experimental designs like the ThinkBook VertiFlex Concept, which features a rotating 14-inch screen that adapts its UI for vertical or horizontal use, and the Smart Motion Concept, a multi-directional laptop stand that integrates gesture and voice control. More practical updates arrived in Lenovo’s workstation range, with refreshed ThinkPad P16, P1, P16v, P16s, and P14s models, all marketed as “AI-ready” for developers and creative professionals. The ThinkPad X9 Aura Edition also received a new Glacier White finish in limited runs.

Supporting peripherals also got attention. The ThinkVision P40WD-40 monitor offers nearly 40 inches of ultrawide real estate at 5K resolution, while new Smart Docks add Thunderbolt 5 support and better multi-display performance. Lenovo is also piloting an “AI Fast Start” program that helps enterprise customers deploy custom AI assistants using Intel’s AI Assistant Builder—early applications are being tested in healthcare, finance, and publishing.

For consumers, Lenovo expanded its Legion gaming line with the updated Legion Go handheld, boasting OLED visuals, longer battery life, and upgraded controllers. The Legion Pro 7 laptop and new Legion Pro OLED monitors aim at high-refresh-rate gaming, while a free 3D Mode update for Legion Glasses Gen 2 brings stereoscopic depth to select titles. AI also shows up in creative tools like FlickLift, a smart overlay for Yoga and IdeaPad devices that can strip backgrounds or sharpen images with minimal effort.

Lenovo also rolled out new tablets, including a Yoga Tab with a 3.2K display and hybrid AI features tailored to creative workflows, plus the lightweight Idea Tab Plus, which integrates Google Gemini and offers AI-powered note-taking.

Meanwhile, Motorola—part of Lenovo’s mobile arm—announced several new smartphones. The motorola edge 60 neo leads the lineup, emphasizing on-device “moto ai” features for photography and productivity. It sports a Sony LYTIA sensor, a telephoto lens, and the company’s usual sleek design language. At the budget end, the moto g06 and g06 power promise large displays, 50MP AI-assisted cameras, and long battery life, with the g06 power offering an outsized 7000mAh battery. Both models include Google’s Circle to Search and Dolby Atmos audio.

Pricing and release windows vary, but Lenovo’s overarching strategy is clear: AI isn’t being pitched as a premium extra anymore—it’s being treated as a baseline capability across product categories. That framing puts Lenovo in direct competition with rivals like HP, Dell, and Apple, who are also embedding generative and adaptive AI into their hardware portfolios.

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