Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gets Discrete Graphics, Bigger Display

Premium laptops like the XPS 15 and ZenBook Pro 15 are coming out of the metalworks with vivid 4K displays and discrete GPUs. Not to be undone, Lenovo is coming out of IFA guns blazing with the ThinkPad X1 Extreme. What makes this so extreme is that it’s the first in Lenovo’s X series to get outfitted with a discrete graphics card and a 15-inch screen.

Lenovo’s 15.6-inch extreme machine starts at $1,859 and certainly lives up to its name by packing up to an 8th Gen Intel Core i9 processor, up to 64GB of RAM, up to two 1TB SSDs and an Nvidia GeForce 1050 Ti Max-Q GPU with 4GB of VRAM. The ThinkPad X1 Extreme Core i7 version is slated to launch in September, and the Core i9 version is expected to land sometime in December.

The 15.6-inch display comes in two flavors: a non-touch 1920 x 1080 panel with 300 nits of brightness as well as a 4K (3,840 x 2,160) touchscreen at 400 nits.

The ThinkPad X1 Extreme stays true to its predecessors’ visual design, with black soft-touch material covering the interior and exterior, accompanied by ThinkPad logos, and accented in red. While the ThinkPad design is neat, it would have been nice to see some change. It measures in at 14.2 x 9.7 x 0.7 (0.74 with touchscreen) and weighs 3.8 pounds (4 pounds with touchscreen), making it just as thin and even lighter than the aforementioned premium laptops.

It also comes with a solid amount of ports as well, including two USB 3.1 ports (1 powered), two Thunderbolt 3 ports, an SD card slot and an HDMI 2.0 port. Additionally, the battery is meant to last up to 15 hours on a charge.

Keep an eye out for the full review and benchmarks once we get this daredevil in.

Rami Tabari
Editor

Rami Tabari is an Editor for Laptop Mag. He reviews every shape and form of a laptop as well as all sorts of cool tech. You can find him sitting at his desk surrounded by a hoarder's dream of laptops, and when he navigates his way out to civilization, you can catch him watching really bad anime or playing some kind of painfully difficult game. He’s the best at every game and he just doesn’t lose. That’s why you’ll occasionally catch his byline attached to the latest Souls-like challenge.