home/parts/Monitors/Lenovo Legion 27Q-10
Lenovo Legion 27Q-10
/ monitor · Lenovo
Lenovo · 2023

Lenovo Legion 27Q-10

27" WQHD IPS 240Hz, FreeSync Premium.

India context

240Hz 1440p under ₹21k — unusual value in India. Color gamut narrower than premium panels but motion performance is genuine. Tilt-only stand.

Official India stock. Full warranty through the brand's India service network, standard RMA if anything goes wrong.

/ specifications

Full specs

19 fields
BrandLenovo
ModelLegion 27Q-10
Release Year2023
Screen Size27"
ResolutionWQHD (2560x1440)
Panel TypeIPS
Refresh Rate240Hz
Response Time1ms
Brightness350 nits
Contrast Ratio1000:1
sRGB Coverage99%
DCI-P3 Coverage80%
HDRHDR 400
VRR / SyncFreeSync Premium
PortsHDMI 2.0, DisplayPort 1.4
USB-CNo
Height AdjustableNo
Built-in SpeakersNo
Warranty (India)3 years
/ Deep Dive

Lenovo Legion 27Q-10 Review India: 240Hz 1440p IPS at ₹18,999 — Underrated Pick?

Lenovo Legion 27Q-10: 240Hz 1440p Under ₹21k — Read This Before Buying

On paper, the Lenovo Legion 27Q-10 looks like the deal of the segment — 27", 1440p, 240Hz, IPS panel, all under ₹20,999. That combination at this price is unusual enough that I get asked about it constantly. Here's the honest breakdown.

240Hz 1440p IPS for under ₹21k sounds too good — and in some ways it is. The panel is a cost-optimized IPS with narrower color gamut than premium alternatives. But for pure gaming motion performance, it does exactly what it says.

Panel & Performance

The IPS panel in the 27Q-10 delivers on the motion performance side. 240Hz is smooth, 1ms GtG response time keeps ghosting in check, and 1440p resolution at 27" means you're getting that 109 PPI sharpness that makes a real visual difference over 1080p.

Where Lenovo has cut costs is color performance. The sRGB coverage is fine for gaming — everything looks vibrant and punchy — but the panel doesn't reach the DCI-P3 coverage you'd find on LG's Nano IPS or similar wide-gamut panels. If you're editing photos or video, this isn't the monitor for that work. For gaming, you won't notice or care.

The stand offers height adjustment and tilt, which is the minimum I'd want from a monitor at this price. No swivel or pivot, which isn't unusual in this category. Build quality feels solid — this is a Legion-branded product and Lenovo's gaming line has been consistent on build.

FreeSync Premium is certified, and G-Sync Compatible works well in practice. I've run this with both AMD and Nvidia cards without issues.

India Availability & Value

Lenovo's India distribution through Acro Engineering means this monitor reaches beyond metro cities. You'll find it at Amazon India, Flipkart, and occasionally at MDComputers. Lenovo's warranty and service network in India is solid for a brand of this size — 3-year coverage and service centers are accessible in most major cities and many tier-2 locations.

At ₹18,999–20,999, the value argument is clear: you're getting 240Hz and 1440p together cheaper than almost anything else in India. The question is whether the panel quality trade-off matters for your use case.

Who Should Buy This

Buy this if you're upgrading from 1080p and want the jump to 1440p without committing to ₹25k+, and if gaming — especially competitive titles where refresh rate matters — is your primary use. Paired with an RTX 4060 Ti or RX 7700 XT, this monitor gives you a genuinely premium gaming experience on a mid-range budget.

Skip it if: Content creation is part of your workflow. The color gamut limitations show up immediately when you're doing anything color-sensitive. Also skip if you're primarily a console gamer — console titles often benefit more from better image quality and HDR than 240Hz at 1440p, and this monitor's HDR implementation is basic.

/ common_questions

Questions

4 answers
What's the warranty in India for the Lenovo Legion 27Q-10?
3 years. This is the official Indian distributor version, which means full manufacturer warranty support.
How does it compare to the LG 27GP850-B at ₹23,999–25,999?

The LG has a noticeably better panel — Nano IPS with wider color gamut and better overall image quality. The Lenovo wins on price by ₹4,000–6,000 and matches it on refresh rate. For pure gaming, the Lenovo is the smarter buy. For anything beyond gaming, pay the premium for the LG.

Does 240Hz at 1440p require a very powerful GPU?

To consistently hit 200+ fps at 1440p you need something like an RTX 4080 or RX 7900 XT in demanding titles. In less demanding games and esports titles, a mid-range GPU handles it fine. Running it at 120–165fps is still smooth with VRR enabled.

Is it available in tier-2 cities in India?

Lenovo's distribution is reasonably broad. Online purchase via Amazon India with delivery everywhere is the most reliable option. Local Lenovo dealers in tier-2 cities can often order it in.