The Lenovo Legion 7a just became one of the first gaming laptops to ship with NVIDIA's new 12GB RTX 5070 mobile chip, and its Best Buy listing tells a story that should give anyone shopping in this price bracket pause. The machine appeared with a $3,374.99 MSRP, which is more expensive than several RTX 5080 laptops currently on sale. That number is, by design, not the real price.
Buried inside the black model's listing is a white "Glacier White" variant with a $575 discount already applied, bringing the actual ask down to $2,799.99. That's the real starting point for this machine. And it's still a problem.

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Why $2,799 doesn't work for a 12GB RTX 5070
Here's the thing: the 12GB RTX 5070 was supposed to be a meaningful upgrade over the base 8GB model, giving mid-range buyers a genuine QHD option without stepping up to the RTX 5070 Ti. The spec bump makes sense on paper. The pricing does not.
Looking at today's Best Buy listings for RTX 5070 Ti gaming laptops, the average MSRP across 19 models (excluding bundles and open-box offers) sits at $2,621.19. The average price those machines are actually selling for right now is $2,491.46. That means you can pick up a full RTX 5070 Ti rig, with a 140W TGP, 192-bit memory bus, and a 1,447 MHz boost clock, for roughly $308 less than Lenovo is asking for a weaker 12GB RTX 5070 laptop.
The base 8GB RTX 5070 market makes the math even harder to swallow. Current average MSRP for that tier is $2,484.05, with an average actual selling price of $2,209.05. For the 12GB RTX 5070 to carve out a logical position between these two tiers, it would need to land at roughly $2,552 at MSRP and around $2,350 when discounts are applied. The Legion 7a's $2,799.99 "sale" price is nearly $250 above where it needs to be just to make sense.
The spec sheet the price ignores
The Legion 7a itself is a capable machine. It pairs the 12GB RTX 5070 with an AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 470, 32GB of RAM, a 1TB SSD, and a 16-inch 2.5K 240Hz OLED panel. That display alone is worth something, and OLED at 240Hz in a mid-range laptop is genuinely appealing for fast-paced titles.
For PC gamers trying to dial in settings for demanding titles, the GPU tier matters a lot. Games pushing Unreal Engine 5 and heavy ray tracing workloads are where that extra 4GB of VRAM over the base 8GB model would theoretically shine. If you're optimizing for something like the best PC settings in Directive 8020, the difference between 8GB and 12GB of VRAM becomes real at higher resolutions with ray tracing enabled.
The problem is that "theoretically" is doing a lot of work here. The RTX 5070 Ti already offers meaningfully better rasterization performance alongside its larger memory bus, and it's cheaper right now.
What this means for PC gamers shopping right now
The 12GB RTX 5070 laptop tier had a real opportunity. Mid-range buyers who don't need the full RTX 5070 Ti but want more VRAM headroom for QHD gaming at higher settings would have been a natural audience. That audience exists. But at $2,799.99 for the first model out of the gate, the value case collapses almost immediately when you pull up any RTX 5070 Ti listing sitting at $2,499 or less.
This isn't entirely Lenovo's fault. Component costs have genuinely risen, and the 12GB GDDR7 configuration does carry a premium over the 8GB variant. But the market doesn't care about manufacturing costs when a better GPU is cheaper. Shoppers looking at demanding upcoming titles will find the Forza Horizon 6 PC system requirements, for example, break down every GPU tier from 1080p to 4K ray tracing, and the RTX 5070 Ti consistently outperforms the base 5070 in every demanding scenario.
The Legion 7a will almost certainly see further discounts as more 12GB RTX 5070 laptops reach shelves from other manufacturers. More competition means more pressure on price. If that tier lands closer to $2,350 in practice, it becomes a genuinely interesting option. At $2,799, it's a tough sell against a market that has already moved on to better value at both ends.
For anyone actively comparing GPU tiers for upcoming releases, our gaming guides hub has spec breakdowns for the biggest titles launching this year, which is worth bookmarking before you commit to any new hardware purchase.








