Perhaps the best laptop for its price right now on the market. I am an IT professional and generally prefer desktop computers; I have quite powerful machines both at home and at the office, so I never really needed to acquire a powerful laptop. I got this machine as a 2nd/complementary one. So I only needed the absolute essentials. That is, 16GB RAM (today you don't buy a machine with less, it's the absolute minimum), at least a 512GB SSD, and at least 4 processor cores. I didn't expect much when I received it, but I have been pleasantly surprised. I installed Windows 11 Pro (costing just about 8 euros for a license) and the machine is quite fast for all basic office tasks. It doesn't seem to lag at all. Obviously, you won't be doing anything extravagant on this, but if you just want to work with Office, maybe some other office applications, surf the internet, watch videos, play light games, etc., you will do so without any problems.
In the games I tried, the graphics processor doesn't have much power, BUT it's not completely terrible either; I consider it comparable to the Intel UHD 730 in desktops. Most indie games will run without issues, at most with some sacrifices in graphics. For AAA games, things are tough; obviously, it can't run the latest generation. But for example, it ran Skyrim Special Edition relatively well, with graphics at 1080p Low. So generally, AAA games from a decade ago can be played with sacrifices in graphics settings. Tip: Lower the resolution to 1366x768 when you want better performance without a dramatic cost to graphics quality. Overall, it's not a laptop you get to play games on, though.
If it's intended as someone's sole machine, they will have to accept several sacrifices. Besides the games I mentioned earlier, for heavier productivity applications, obviously more cores and RAM are needed. While the disk, although quite fast (Nvme Pcie 4.0x4), is not particularly large by today's standards, and from what I saw, although I could be wrong, it does not accept a 2nd disk and the maximum disk size is 512GB, so at most you can replace this one if it fails; if you want more space, only external with USB. Another sacrifice is the screen, which is frankly of mediocre quality. Obviously, you get what you pay for. The colors are not bad for a TN Panel, but the viewing angles are terrible; only one person can see properly and only from specific viewing angles. However, it has a quick response and has no issues with fast refresh rates, and it is also Freesync, which fits perfectly with the Radeon iGPU.
I read from some that they had issues with the speakers; I don't know, they seemed fine to me. I also liked the volume/quality it gives to headphones; it didn't differ much from the Realtek on my desktop. It has a standard 720p camera with a switch to turn it off, Wifi 6, 3 USB 3.2 ports, one of which is type C (which can also output display port 1.2). It has an HDMI 1.4 output and of course an ethernet port, while it also accepts a Kensington Nano lock. The battery lasts several hours with moderate use, and the laptop neither heats up particularly nor makes noise, unless I stress it with some demanding game. Also, the laptop is featherlight for its size, very comfortable overall.
Overall, for someone who wants a decent laptop for office work, at a very affordable price, it is perhaps the best choice. To see serious improvement, you need to significantly increase your budget.