Lenovo has put a new all-in-one desktop, the Xiaoxin Pro 27 2026 Core Edition, on sale in China. It pairs Intel’s Core Ultra 5 325 with a 27-inch QHD panel running at 120 Hz, plus a 96% screen-to-body ratio that should keep the bezels politely out of the way.
The configuration is not stingy either: 16 GB of LPDDR5X-7647 memory, a 1 TB M.2 PCIe Gen4 NVMe SSD, and a wireless keyboard and mouse in the box. At 9000 yuan, or about $1300, Lenovo is aiming above the bargain-bin all-in-one crowd and squarely at buyers who want a cleaner desktop without surrendering too much performance.
Display, thermals and the webcam setup
Lenovo says the 27-inch panel carries QHD resolution and TÜV Rheinland certification for lower blue-light output and flicker-free operation. The chassis is just 15.8 mm thick, and the company claims noise levels of around 16 dB, which is the sort of spec that matters more than any glossy launch video when this machine sits on a real desk all day.
The camera is a 2592 x 1944 unit, backed by two microphones with intelligent noise reduction and a Dolby Harman 2.0 audio system. That puts the Xiaoxin Pro 27 2026 in the same broad lane as other premium all-in-ones from Apple and HP, where the pitch is no longer ”a computer with a screen” but ”a cleaner laptop replacement that happens to live on a stand.”
Ports that avoid the usual all-in-one headache
One of the more sensible parts of the spec sheet is the port selection. Lenovo includes Wi-Fi 6, USB-C, USB-A at 10 Gbit/s, HDMI 2.1, HDMI-in, gigabit Ethernet, and a 3.5 mm audio jack. That HDMI-in port is especially useful, because it lets the machine double as a display for another device instead of pretending everyone only ever uses one computer.
- Processor: Intel Core Ultra 5 325
- Display: 27-inch QHD, 120 Hz
- Memory: 16 GB LPDDR5X-7647
- Storage: 1 TB M.2 PCIe Gen4 NVMe SSD
- Price in China: 9000 yuan, about $1300
A premium all-in-one with a narrow target
This is not a machine built to undercut budget desktops. It is Lenovo leaning into the idea that some buyers will pay extra for a tidy setup, high refresh rate, and a built-in camera and speakers that do not feel like afterthoughts. The bigger question is whether that formula travels outside China, where all-in-ones tend to live or die on just how much convenience people are willing to buy back with their wallet.

