Early results from a Lenovo Yoga 7 2-in-1 16AGP11 suggest AMD’s Ryzen AI 7 445 may not deliver the graphics leap some shoppers are hoping for, at least in the first batch of in-house benchmarks. The chip is paired with AMD Radeon 840M integrated graphics, and the numbers place it firmly in “basic iGPU” territory rather than anything that threatens higher-tier integrated solutions.
In the tested Yoga 7 configuration, the Radeon 840M tied to the Ryzen AI 7 445 repeatedly lands in the same neighborhood as other Radeon 840M results, showing a narrow span between samples. Across multiple commonly referenced synthetic graphics tests, the average Radeon 840M scores shown hover around these ranges: roughly 7,674 to 8,453 in one set of results, about 5,172 to 5,606 in another, and around 1,415 to 1,705 and 1,605 to 1,928 in two additional test groupings. In plain terms, that’s consistency, but not a breakout.
What makes this interesting is the surrounding competition. Systems listed alongside these results include a mix of modern Windows laptops with Intel Arc Graphics 140V (paired with Core Ultra 7 chips like the 256V and 258V), older but still capable AMD Radeon 780M laptops powered by Ryzen 7 8840HS, and higher-end AMD integrated graphics like Radeon 880M with Ryzen AI 9 465. There are also laptops shown with entry and midrange discrete options like the GeForce RTX 5050 Laptop GPU. Against that broader field, Radeon 840M is positioned more as an efficiency-focused solution for everyday work than a credible option for demanding creative workloads or gaming-heavy use.
For buyers, the practical takeaway is straightforward. A Ryzen AI 7 445 laptop with Radeon 840M should be a good fit for productivity, streaming, web-heavy multitasking, office apps, and light photo editing, especially if the overall laptop package is strong (display, keyboard, battery life, thermals). But if you’re shopping specifically for stronger integrated graphics performance, the listings make it clear there are more capable options in the same conversation, notably machines built around Radeon 880M or Radeon 780M, or laptops that step up to discrete graphics.
These are still early, in-house benchmark sightings rather than a broad wave of retail reviews, so performance could vary by laptop power limits, memory configuration, cooling, and drivers. Even so, the initial picture is that Ryzen AI 7 445’s Radeon 840M isn’t aiming to redefine iGPU expectations. It looks more like a sensible baseline for thin-and-light convertibles than a hidden graphics upgrade.






