Lenovo Legion Go 2 Price Shock Hits Gamers

Pricing on Lenovo’s Legion Go 2 has reportedly gone vertical, with some configurations now costing roughly six hundred and fifty dollars more and Z2 Extreme builds flirting with a two thousand dollar tag. The spike lands just as memory vendors push through a new wave of dynamic random-access memory hikes across the supply chain.

The Legion Go 2 and Z2 Extreme sit in a crowded handheld PC segment where bill of materials is dominated by graphics subsystems, high-bandwidth RAM, and solid-state storage. When contract prices for DRAM and GDDR move in tandem, the marginal cost of each additional gigabyte rises, and vendors often pass that entropy straight into retail stickers. For devices already tuned near their thermal design power limits, swapping to cheaper, lower-speed modules can hurt frame pacing and latency, so cutting capacity is a poor lever.

Analysts describe a classic supply–demand squeeze: fabs prioritize higher-margin server modules, leaving gaming hardware exposed to volatility. That creates an awkward value equation for handheld buyers who now see console-level or even desktop-level pricing for portable rigs. Competing x86 and custom-APU machines may try to defend their moat with aggressive bundles, but if RAMageddon continues, the entire handheld ecosystem will be forced to rethink performance tiers, configurations, and what counts as a flagship price ceiling.

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