Lenovo's Yoga 32 Ultra Aura is a 32-inch 4K OLED all-in-one with a 165Hz screen

By: Anton Kratiuk | today, 13:46
Lenovo Yoga 32 Ultra Aura — 31.5-inch 4K OLED display with 165Hz refresh rate and 1000 nits peak brightness. Lenovo Yoga 32 Ultra Aura — 31.5-inch 4K OLED display with 165Hz refresh rate and 1000 nits peak brightness.. Source: Photo: Lenovo

Lenovo has unveiled the Yoga 32 Ultra Aura, a premium all-in-one desktop built around a 31.5-inch 4K OLED display running at 165Hz — a spec sheet that puts it squarely against Apple's iMac, but at a lower asking price. The US launch is set for Q2 2026 at $2,399.99, per the Lenovo CES announcement. No UK or wider European availability has been confirmed yet.

The screen

The 3840×2160 OLED panel hits 1000 nits peak brightness, covers 99% of the DCI-P3 colour space, and drops to a 0.1ms response time. Anti-glare and oleophobic coatings are standard, and DC dimming reduces flicker — details that matter for long editing sessions or daily desk work. No 32-inch OLED all-in-one is currently shipping at this price point from any other manufacturer.

Lenovo Yoga 32 Ultra Aura — 31.5-inch 4K OLED display with 165Hz refresh rate and 1000 nits peak brightness.
Lenovo Yoga 32 Ultra Aura — 31.5-inch 4K OLED display with 165Hz refresh rate and 1000 nits peak brightness.

Under the hood

The machine runs on an Intel Core Ultra X7 358H — a 16-core chip (4 performance, 8 efficient, 4 low-power efficient cores) clocked up to 4.8GHz with 180 TOPS of on-device AI compute. Graphics come from integrated Intel Xe3 with 12 Xe-cores, supporting ray tracing and XeSS 3 upscaling. Notebookcheck's Core Ultra X7 358H breakdown notes the generational multi-core gain over the previous Core Ultra 7 is modest — around 4% — so don't expect a dramatic leap from last-generation hardware. RAM is 32GB LPDDR5X at 9600 MT/s, storage is a 1TB PCIe 4.0 SSD.

The Yoga 32 Ultra Aura is powered by Intel Core Ultra X7 358H with 32GB LPDDR5X RAM and a 1TB PCIe 4.0 SSD.
The Yoga 32 Ultra Aura is powered by Intel Core Ultra X7 358H with 32GB LPDDR5X RAM and a 1TB PCIe 4.0 SSD.

Audio is handled by a Harman Kardon quad-speaker setup with Dolby Atmos. A 16MP IR camera with face recognition and a four-mic array are built in. The base includes RGB lighting, and a wireless keyboard and mouse are in the box. Connectivity covers Thunderbolt 4, HDMI 2.1, USB-A, USB-C, a 3.5mm jack, Wi-Fi 7, and Bluetooth.

The price gap

Lenovo is already selling the Yoga 32 Ultra Aura in China for the equivalent of roughly $3,374 — about $975 more than the expected US retail price. That gap reflects regional pricing strategy rather than a different product. At $2,399.99, it undercuts the new iMac 32-inch, which starts above $4,000, while matching it on screen size and beating it on refresh rate. Real-world benchmarks haven't been published yet, so performance claims are still based on spec sheets alone.

The UK already has Lenovo's Aura Edition laptops — the Yoga Slim 7i starts at £1,620 — but Lenovo has not announced a desktop Aura Edition for Britain. If a UK launch follows the US one, expect pricing to be confirmed closer to Q2 2026.