I bought the laptop for work, so the gaming designation missed me a bit. All in all, it met expectations, the construction is sturdy, the plastics are of good quality, nothing moves anywhere, etc. The display is perfect, 240 hz can be great not only for games but also for work. Dragging and dropping files, navigating menus, moving around the desktop, and everything is beautifully smooth. Lenovo offers the option to let the system choose between integrated silent graphics and dedicated graphics for work, i.e. depending on the workload this or that is used. When the power is applied, the battery is charged and no current flows through anything, so it does not wear out. The microphone works great, I use it when dictating text in Word. It should be added that if the provot has dedicated graphics (GTX), the fans are running. They're audible, not that they're not. When playing with headphones it doesn't matter, when working you can feel it, but you get used to it. I have bought a heatsink (motherboard under the notebook), but it doesn't help much. The keyboard has a higher stroke than I would need, but I don't worry about it, I type on an external one. The TouchPad responds well. The periphery connection from the back was initially negative, but now it's clear that it's 100x better than from the side. Nothing is in the way, it's neat. The dimensions of the notebook are favorable, for a size 16 inches ideal. It fits in a backpack pocket for a 15 inch size. One more minor info - the charger is huge, I use a 100w cell phone charger with a 100w cable. The battery is recharged and after recharging it is disconnected again and only goes on the charger. We have measured the power consumption on the network, it varies according to the load of the graphics with 60-130 watts. So when I connect it to a 100w charger, the laptop has to manage the limited power and therefore hinders performance. This is something to be reckoned with