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It’s getting harder and harder to find a monitor that doesn’t have some flavor of OLED panel, which is a good thing because the technologies is getting better and better. That leaves monitor manufacturers having to differentiate in other ways, like this Lenovo Yoga Pro 27UD-10.
It’s a 4K, 120Hz QD-OLED display, but the best parts are all the added value. The removable 4K30 webcam with continuous autofocus. The six speakers that are Dolby Atmos certified, while the display is Dolby Vision certified. The oodles of connectivity options, including 140W USB-C Power Delivery.
The thing is, you’ll pay for that added value, and some of its neatest tricks won’t work unless you have a Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i laptop to plug into it. If so, you get Color Sync, and all six speakers inside the monitor synchronize with the six inside the laptop, presumably giving you great sound. (I couldn’t test as our Yoga Pro 9i test unit had already gone back).
About this review: Lenovo loaned XDA the monitor used in this review, and it had no input into its contents.

The Lenovo Yoga Pro 27UD-10 is a gorgeous QD-OLED 4K monitor with a removable 4K webcam. It’s got four integrated microphones, and six capable speakers, perfect for a sleek productivity desktop arrangement.
The Lenovo Yoga Pro 27UD-10 was announced at CES 2026, with a MSRP of $1,500. For that you get a third-gen QD-OLED panel with 4K resolution, 120Hz refresh rate, and good color coverage. You also get a superb detachable 4K30 webcam, plenty of ports for other devices, six speakers and four microphones, making this a one-device option for productivity, relaxing, and gaming.
Lenovo designed the Yoga Pro 27UD-10 as a one-cable desktop setup with media consumption at the forefront, and they have nailed it. The stylish screen has all the connectivity you could want, while six speakers (two tweeters, four woofers) combine to a pleasing amount of sound that doesn’t get tinny or distorted.
Image quality is good, with 100% sRGB, 99% P3, but only 89% AdobeRGB as measured. The tone response is a little off with it overshooting gamma settings at lower brightness, and the white point is on the warm side with a noticeable red shift on larger areas of light colors.
That might be due to the luminance drop-off below 100% brightness, as it’s only 80 nits at 67% brightness setting and under 38 nits at 50%. I measured 263 nits peak brightness, slightly above the 250 on the specs sheet, and at no time did I think it needed to be brighter.

The 4K30 webcam has impressive image quality from the 1/1.8-inch Sony CMOS sensor inside, and with continuous autofocus you’ll always be in crisp view. Possibly too crisp, as I had to turn on the filters in Google Meet to even out my skin tone, but YMMV here.
I like that it doesn’t take up a USB port, and the magnetic physical cover is a nice touch. You can also tilt it forward to show your desktop surface if you need to, and the autofocus will keep the surface and your hands in view nicely.
With the quality of display panels coming onto the market, it’s difficult to pick faults with the monitors they come installed in. The Yoga Pro 27UD-10 is clearly being inspired by Apple’s Studio Display range, with a very similar stand. That, unfortunately, means some adjustability is lost, and you can’t turn this panel into portrait mode.
Maybe you wouldn’t want to, as the webcam would be in a very odd position then. It slots into a USB-C port on the top edge, but does have a security screw to fasten to deter anyone who might want to pluck it from its nest.
Aside from the minor display issues I mentioned earlier, that’s the only other issue I have with this monitor. It’s got tons of added features that actually make sense when used, and it looks snazzy in front of you.
The Lenovo Yoga Pro 27UD-10 is a stylish, svelte monitor that was designed as a pairing for the Yoga Pro 9i Aura Edition laptop. That doesn’t mean you can’t use it with anything else, but when connected together they sync the color space used for more accurate creative work, and do some neat-sounding speaker tricks.
It’s got plenty of connectivity options, or you can make a true one-cable workstation with one USB4 cable, as the monitor has superb sound, microphones, and a 4K30 webcam that tilts down to show your desktop if you need to present things. It’s not the most adjustable monitor, and the panel has some white point issues, but overall it’s a good solution for uncluttered desktops.