Besides the rebranding, Lenovo had also dropped several gimmicks from the phone’s predecessors, with the most notable omission being the side-mounted pop-up selfie camera. Instead, the Legion Y90 is presented as a more straightforward gaming smartphone that is more similar to those offered by rivals such as ASUS ROG, Black Shark, Nubia, and so on. Featured onboard the new device is an improved dual-fan internal cooling system, two USB-C slots, left and right shoulder buttons, and an unhindered display. Specifically, the Lenovo Legion Y90 sports a flat 6.92-inch E4 AMOLED display with 2460 x 1080 pixel resolution, 144 Hz refresh rate, 720 Hz touch sampling rate, and HDR10+ support. Under its hood is Qualcomm’s latest Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 flagship chipset, coupled together with up to a whopping 18GB of RAM and up to 640GB of internal storage (UFS + SSD for the top-end configuration). The gaming phone also features Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 5.2 support, 5G connectivity, dual speakers, RGB lighting on its back, Android 12 via Lenovo’s ZUI 13 interface, and a massive 5,600 mAh battery with 68W fast charging support. The latter enables the phone to be fully charged in just 38 minutes when utilising both USB-C ports, the company claims. Situated on the phone’s rear island, alongside the cooling system and RGB logo, is a dual camera setup consisting of a 64MP primary sensor and a 13MP ultra-wide lens. Meanwhile, housed within the front display’s upper bezel is a 16MP camera for selfies, video calls, and even live streaming.
As with the Y700 tablet, the new Legion Y90 gaming smartphone will be available in China on 10 March. It is offered in three different configurations and pricing: 12GB + 256GB at CNY 3,999 (~RM 2,655), 16GB + 256GB at CNY 4,299 (~RM 2,855), and 18GB + 640GB at CNY 4,999 (~RM 3,320). The phone’s availability in other regions has not been confirmed by the company at this current time. (Source: Lenovo China [official website])