Last year at CES 2025, Lenovo announced the world’s first rollable laptop , and this year at CES 2026 , Lenovo is taking that idea and applying it to the Legion Pro Rollable. This is a gaming laptop, and as the name suggests, it incorporates a rollable display to enlarge the visual space for your games. Just think about getting some work done on your laptop so you’re done for the day, and now it’s time to boot up and play some games, so you roll the display out to make it bigger for a more immersive experience.

That’s the kind of vision Lenovo seems to have, here. Sadly, this is still just a concept gaming laptop, and not a real product. However, the rollable laptop from last year was a concept at one point, too. And Lenovo eventually turned it into a product you could buy. That bodes well for the Legion Pro Rollable. As for the remaining specs, the display is 16 inches, but it extends either left or right to 21.5 inches, and then to the opposite side for a full 24-inch screen. Giving you a near ultrawide experience in a portable package. Which is quite neat. The display is also an OLED panel, and it has a 24:9 aspect ratio. Additionally, it’s based on the Legion Pro 7i with the top spec, so it comes with an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 and an Intel Core Ultra CPU. Lenovo doesn’t mention RAM or storage.

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The Lenovo Legion Pro Rollable is one of many gaming products from Lenovo at CES 2026

LG’s Legion Pro Rollable concept is certainly cool, and we hope it becomes a real product that goes on sale. Having said that, Lenovo is also announcing several other real gaming products that will launch later this year. For instance, the new Legion Go 2 that runs Steam OS and is powered by the AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme. This new Legion handheld comes with an 8.8-inch PureSight OLED display with up to 32GB of RAM and up to 2TB of storage. Compared to the original Legion Go 2, you get more storage, more RAM, and a more powerful chipset. But expect that to raise the price. The Windows Legion Go 2 is $1,099, and the Steam OS Legion Go 2 is starting at $1,199.

It also wouldn’t be a CES without Lenovo announcing some new gaming laptops. Lenovo has a few that it’s revealing this week. This includes the Legion 7a, the Legion 5i, the Legion 5a, the LOQ 15AHP11, and the LOQ 15IPH11 laptops. Specs range from the AMD Ryzen AI 400 series chipsets to the AMD Ryzen 200 series chipsets. All the laptops are powered by up to the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 GPU. Lenovo also says the laptops can support up to 2TB of storage. The weight on most of them sits just over 4 lbs., as well. So they shouldn’t be too heavy to carry around. Prices start at $1,149 for the LOQ 15AHP11, and go all the way up to a starting price of $1,999 for the Legion 7a. As for availability, the Legion 7a is expected this June, while the others are expected to hit shelves in April.

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Lenovo envisions an AI-powered gaming display

Lastly, Lenovo is also announcing a display concept called the AI Frame Gaming Display proof of concept. It’s a display that has built-in AI software features to assist gamers in making specific decisions. One such feature is the AI Scene Detection. This, according to Lenovo, would recognize the type of game being played and use that information to “intelligently zoom in key areas and display them in the top-right corner of the screen, making map information clearer or highlighting relevant visual information during high-intensity gameplay—especially useful for FPS or MOBA games.”

The display can also track your cursor and display that in the top corner, or even provide real-time guidance through challenging game scenarios, like really hard boss fights.