GPU Performance

The Y700 is marketed as a gaming notebook, so this section may be the most important for potential buyers. The GTX 960M found inside the Lenovo Y700 is a Maxwell part, but it’s not exactly new. This is a GM107 part - so we're looking at first-generation Maxwell - and is actually the same GPU as the Maxwell version of GTX 860M (it came in two versions), but the GTX 960M has higher frequencies than its predecessor. This is definitely a mid-level card, with NVIDIA offering several cards below, and more powerful (and featured-filled) cards above this including the GTX 965M, and then the much more powerful GTX 970M and 980M.

The GTX 960M has been around since March of last year, but just due to the devices that we’ve had in for review in the last year, the GTX 960M has not graced our desks. This is a 640 CUDA core part, and it can support either two or four gigabytes of GDDR5 RAM accessed through a 128-bit bus.

As with our System tests, the Lenovo Y700 will be compared to a cross sampling of devices, but for those that want to compare it to any other system we’ve tested, please user our Notebook Bench.

First we’ll start with our synthetic tests and then move into gaming results.

3DMark

Futuremark 3DMark (2013)

Futuremark 3DMark (2013)

Futuremark 3DMark (2013)

Futuremark 3DMark (2013)

Futuremark 3DMark (2013)

Futuremark 3DMark (2013)

Futuremark 3DMark 11

The GTX 960M paired with Core i7-6700HQ is very respectable in 3DMark, easily doubling the GT 940M performance in the Surface Book, and coming in pretty close to the GTX 870M. The bigger GPUs still offer a lot more performance.

GFXBench

GFXBench 3.0 Manhattan Offscreen 1080p

GFXBench 3.0 T-Rex Offscreen 1080p

GFXBench has been updated to version 4.0 on Windows now, but it does retain a couple of the older tests. Manhattan and T-Rex are both pretty light tests by any measure of a device with a discrete GPU, and the GTX 960M aces these with no issues. There’s a big gap to the top tier NVIDIA mobile cards.

Dota 2

Dota 2 Reborn - Enthusiast

Valve’s Multiplayer Online Battle Arena game Dota 2 got a new engine under the hood. The new version is a lot heavier on CPU than the previous one, but it’s still a game that can be played well on low end hardware. For those that want to turn up all of the effects, the Y700 handles this game very nicely. Our enthusiast settings offered over 90 frames per second on average, and even with Dota 2 set to “Ultra” it still provides 84.7 frames per second. The Y700 would be a great entry level gaming laptop for this very popular game.

Tomb Raider

Tomb Raider - Value

Tomb Raider - Mainstream

Tomb Raider - Enthusiast

The latest version of Tomb Raider is now out, and Rise of the Tomb Raider looks to set the bar even higher than the original, but the first game in this series reboot can still be punishing with all options, including TressFX, enabled. The Y700 can handle this version pretty well, but the top settings can certainly make the system struggle. I’m hoping to add Rise of the Tomb Raider to our laptop suite going forward, but we need a couple more systems to test it on first.

Bioshock Infinite

Bioshock Infinite - Mainstream

Bioshock Infinite - Enthusiast

This is another game that is getting to be a bit long in the tooth, but it can still be a challenge to run on modern laptops with the settings cranked up. The Y700 is only just over 40 frames per second on Enthusiast settings, but as you can see if you turn the settings down a bit, the frame rate jumps up a lot.

Dragon Age Inquisition

Dragon Age: Inquisition - Value

Dragon Age: Inquisition - Mainstream

Dragon Age: Inquisition - Enthusiast

Bioware’s massive RPG can also be very punishing with settings cranked up in the game. This is the first game where the frame rate drops to unplayable on Enthusiast. Even the Mainstream settings are a struggle for this game, which has some pretty insane draw distances, and even with the 4GB GTX 960M option, it pushes this card to its limits.

Middle-Earth: Shadow of Mordor

Shadow of Mordor - Value

Shadow of Mordor - Mainstream

Shadow of Mordor - Enthusiast

The well received action-adventure game from Warner Brothers and Monolith Productions uses the LithTech game engine, and with everything set to maximum at 1080p, the GTX 960M barely keeps an average over 30 frames per second, so once again this test is a bit too demanding for this laptop. Some tweaking of the settings with GeForce Experience would be required.

GRID Autosport

GRID Autosport - Mainstream

GRID Autosport - Enthusiast

The EGO 3.0 engine which powers this latest version of the Codemasters racing series has quite a bit of dynamic range with the settings, but even on our maximum settings the frame rate average is playable. The GTX 960M is certainly at its limits already, but it still does enough to be useful, delivering over 50fps at 1080p Ultra with 4x MSAA.

GPU Conclusion

The GTX 960M is a decent graphics card for a lower cost gaming laptop. It can generally play most games at 1080p with settings dialed down perhaps a bit. If you have the UHD version of the Y700, it certainly won’t be enough power to game very well at its native resolution of 3840x2160. The base 1920x1080 model is served pretty well though with this combination.

There is still a big gap to the GTX 970M though, but we have to put the Y700 into the context of where it stands price wise. The GTX 960M is the sweet spot for performance and price.

System and Storage Performance Display
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  • JusSn - Friday, February 12, 2016 - link

    Really impressed with this laptop, got the 1 TB/8GB RAM model and put in an m.2 mSATA for less than $980 total. Other than the screen (which is indeed horrible and has terrible PWM flickering at lower brightness), the only thing that bothers me is that the trackpad is slightly uneven. Does the review unit also have this problem? Can't really tell from the photos.

    On my unit the upper-left corner is millimetrically higher than the surrounding wrist rest area. It's nitpicking but I'm wondering if I should get it exchanged once I get back to living with my desktop.
  • Timings - Tuesday, February 16, 2016 - link

    I was also disappointed the day I got this Y700 with just 1TB 5400 rpm drive. It was damn slow when booting as if it has Intel Celeron inside. I replaced the HDD with a Kingston hyper x SSD and then I liked it. Out of the box, the display is really horrible as you have said it. I peeled off the plastic on the screen the same day, still it did not impress me much. But here is a solution which you can do since you have already spent your money for it: calibrate it. 1. Go to Control panel then Intel HD graphics, then Display. Select colour settings then select Basic. Reduce brightness from 0 to -20. Leave gamma and contrast as default. Click Apply. Then select Advance. Increase hue from 0 to 16, increase saturation from 0 to 57. Click Apply and close Intel HD graphics. 2. While still on control panel window, select Display then select Calibrate colour. Click next next next until you reach Adjust colour balance. Move the Red and Green sliders from 100% to somewhere around 85% by eye. Leave the Blue slider at 100% (default) and click Next then Finish. If you thought of selling that laptop, you will now think twice after doing these settings.
  • Michael Bay - Saturday, February 13, 2016 - link

    Whatever OEM first makes a gaming laptop that doesn`t look any different from your run-of-the-mill machine will get incredible money.
    Those things aren`t just ugly, they scream loser.
  • GeorgeH - Saturday, February 13, 2016 - link

    "It does include a number pad, but it is compressed into the rest of the keyboard when there is plenty of space on the laptop deck to stretch it out a bit."

    I very much doubt that. If they did stretch it out there'd be no room for the ports on the side unless they made the laptop thicker.
  • ET - Sunday, February 14, 2016 - link

    I have a Y70-70, and I'm quite disappointed with it. Biggest problem is the laptop shutting down during gaming, probably due to overheating. The touch screen also acts occasionally, making the laptop non-responsive until I put it to sleep and out (with the power button). Keyboard isn't that great. In short, I'm weary of Lenovo's offerings right now.
  • medi03 - Sunday, February 14, 2016 - link

    Meh for no Carrize 380M... =(
  • horrorwood - Tuesday, February 16, 2016 - link

    It literally looks the same as the y50-70?

    Considering the GPU is the same and it comes with haswell instead of skylake (not much difference), I think the clearance prices on the y50-70 are a steal.
  • evolucion8 - Thursday, February 18, 2016 - link

    Seeing how close the GTX 960M with its 640 cores can get when compared with the GTX 870M with its 1344 cores shows how nVidia stopped optimizing for Kepler and considering that Maxwell is essentially a distilled Kepler, it will face the same fate once Pascal is launched, the fast aging syndrome.
  • deeps6x - Friday, February 19, 2016 - link

    Why is it so much heavier than the MSI GS60 with the same specs? 2.7kg vs 2.0kg. Or if you prefer, 5.7 lbs vs 4.4 lbs.
  • Billybadass - Monday, July 4, 2016 - link

    This is the dumbest article I've ever read in my entire life and this guy has no idea what he's talking about.

    The Lenovo y700 (every model) comes with a battery that lasts UP TO 5 hours (http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/laptops/ideapad/y700-... but that lasts only 4 hrs 16 mins upon continuous web surfing (http://www.laptopmag.com/reviews/laptops/lenovo-y7... so there is NO WAY IN HELL this guy found it to last for EIGHT hours of continuous gaming.

    Not to mention since I just bought mine and have been using it for light customization and light web surfing the battery has lasted me at, yep... just above 4 hours. Can you IMAGINE if I had been gaming?

    Ignore this article.

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