The Yoga Tab Plus is powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 processor with 16GB of RAM and 256GB of storage. This is a previous-gen processor rather than the most current one, but Lenovo pairs it with a significant amount of memory. You may, however, find the tablet’s 256GB of storage somewhat limiting. This is the only configuration Lenovo offers, and you can’t supplement it with a microSD storage card.
To gauge the tablet’s performance, I compared it with the Galaxy Tab S10 FE+ (which is powered by a Samsung Exynos 1580 processor) and the OnePlus Pad 3 (which uses the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite, the top chip available at the moment).
( Credit: Geekbench/PCMark/PCMag)
In Geekbench 6, which measures raw CPU power, the Yoga Tab Plus scored 2,186 on the single-core test and 6,441 on the multi-core test. This outperformed the Tab S10 FE+ (1,358 and 3,886), but fell well short of the Pad 3 (3,082 and 9,040).
On the PCMark Work 3.0 test, which measures general mobile tasks, the Yoga scored 24,599, handily outperforming the Galaxy Tab’s 13,361. We don’t have test data for the Pad 3.
To assess graphics performance, we use the GFXBench Aztec Ruins test. The Yoga produced 48 frames per second (fps), beating the Pad 3’s rate of 43fps, and more than tripling the Tab S10 FE+’s rate of 15fps.
For real-world gaming performance, I played Genshin Impact, a notoriously resource-intensive game. At the highest graphics settings and at 60fps, the Yoga Tab rendered highly detailed images with wonderfully fluid animations. I experienced no slowdowns or stutters, and the tablet didn’t get warm, even after a 20-minute gaming session.
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