The Lenovo CES announcements always excite me, as you can expect to see upgrades in the day-to-day lineup, but you also see those products that are ambitious that others may not try, and this year it’s no different. A rollable OLED laptop concept, and I can see the logic here, if we have foldable phones, why can’t we extend to gaming laptops and give gamers a bigger on-the-go battlestation?

The Legion Pro Rollable concept allows a 16-inch laptop to extend to 21.5 inches or a full 24 inches. The Rollable PureSight OLED panel uses a dual-monitor tension system that unrolls from both sides, maintaining a rigid structure with minimal vibration. Lenovo targets esports professionals who train on 24-inch monitors and travel regularly. The laptop can be used in three modes: the 16-inch Focus Mode for reflex training, the 21.5-inch Tactical Mode for peripheral vision drills and teamwork training, and the full 24-inch mode for a full-on battle station. This concept is built on the absolute best Intel and Nvidia hardware rocking Core Ultra processors and the Nvidia GeForce 5090 GPU.
The other proof-of-concept is the AI Frame Gaming Display, a monitor that uses onboard AI to analyze gameplay and display statistics. It can identify game types and room-critical areas in the top-right corner, such as your game minimap. It can locate your cursor to help you focus on details, detect boss missions or more challenging areas in gameplay, and offer suggestions. Adaptive AI Lighting can also override ambient light in titles, such as when you may be taking damage.

Looking for a new handheld? Look no further, the Legion Go 8.8-inch is coming, powered by SteamOS Tus, which combines the hardware of the latest Windows 11-powered Legion Go with SteamOS. Full power to include the AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme, up to 32GB LPDDR5X RAM, up to a 2TB storage with a matching 2TB microSD card slot on an 8.8-inch PureSight OLED Display.

Want to go full battlestation instead? The new Legion 7a 16-inch laptop is your ticket and the latest premium edition to the lineup that’s 10 percent lighter and up to 5 percent thinner than the previous generation, rocking the AMD Ryzen AI 400 Series processors, the Nvidia 50 series GPUs with up to 125W TDP, and the new Legion AI+ Engine for cooling and enhanced thermal design. PureSight OLED displays will be available with ColdFront Hypercolling, keeping your battlestation locked, loaded, and ready.

Don’t need the full battlestation, or maybe you don’t have the budget for it? The LOQ lineup, also known as the budget-friendly offering, is getting an upgrade as well. The LOQ lineup is getting a new LOQ 15AHP11 with features from AMD Ryzen 200 Series processors, while the LOQ 15IPH11 series is getting Core Ultra processors. However, the Intel version is not sold in the United States. It’s worth noting that the LCQ series is Luna Gray in color, with a 15.3 WQVGA display and Hyperchamber Cooling.
Pricing and availability
- Legion Go (SteamOS) – $1,199, June 2026
- Legion 7a (16″, 11) – $1,999, April 2026
- Legion 5i (15″, 11) – $1,549, April 2026
- Legion 5a (Ryzen AI 400) – $1,499, April 2026
- Legion 5a (Ryzen 200 Series) – $1,299, April 2026
- LOQ 15AHP11 – $1,149, April 2026
- LOQ 15IPH11 – Select markets only


