Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i (2025) Review: Still the Best Laptop for Programmers, Engineers & Creators?
August 16, 2025
|Yoga Pro 9i: Best Laptop?
The 2025 model continues to be one of our top recommendations — but it also comes with some important upgrades and a few lingering flaws.
But it’s not all good news. Battery life is still weak, the trackpad feels dated, and heavy tasks like gaming can drain the battery even when plugged in unless you buy Lenovo’s higher-wattage charger.
The Ultra 9 285H chip provides excellent multi-core and single-core results compared to other laptops with the same CPU. It’s about 10–13% faster than last year’s 185H model, without drawing more power.
That said, Apple’s M4 Pro chips remain far more efficient, and higher-core Intel HX processors in laptops like the Acer Predator Helios Neo 16S outpace it at only slightly higher power draws. The Pro 9i also runs a bit warmer than competitors using the same chip.
On the GPU side, Lenovo is slightly conservative with wattage limits. In benchmarks like 3DMark Time Spy and Port Royal, the Pro 9i trails higher-wattage competitors such as the Strix G16. In real-world gaming, it averages around 60 FPS in Cyberpunk 2077 at 2560x1600, but frame rates would dip further at native resolution.
For creators, results are stronger:
It’s not the best gaming laptop, but it’s a capable creator machine.
Compared to rivals like the Asus Zephyrus G16, which ships with higher-wattage chargers, Lenovo’s decision feels like a misstep.
Unfortunately, endurance is still poor. Without an iGPU-only mode and with a power-hungry tandem OLED panel, the Pro 9i struggles to hit six hours in office and video playback tests. The MacBook Pro 16 lasts far longer, and even gaming laptops like the Aero X16 do better.
The 16-inch Tandem OLED is easily the standout feature. Bright, sharp, buttery-smooth at 120Hz, and free from common OLED issues like PWM flicker. It’s a dream for coding, spreadsheets, and content creation.
Be aware that the Tandem OLED is only available on RTX 5060+ models. Lower configurations use a standard OLED capped at 500 nits.
The Yoga Pro 9i (2025) is still one of the best all-rounder laptops for developers, engineers, and creators who spend most of their time plugged in and value display quality and keyboard comfort above all.
Alternatives worth considering: