Lenovo unveils Rollable Legion Pro, Legion Go, and more gaming devices at CES 2026

Lenovo has announced its latest array of gaming hardware at CES 2026, expanding its Legion and LOQ line-ups while also teasing an ambitious new laptop concept featuring a rollable OLED display. The announcements span laptops, handhelds, and display concepts designed for gamers, students, and creators alike.

The standout reveal is the Legion Pro Rollable Concept, a high-end gaming laptop featuring a rollable Lenovo PureSight OLED display that expands horizontally from 16 inches to 21.5 inches and up to 24 inches. Designed for travelling esports professionals, the concept aims to replicate tournament-grade setups in a portable form. The display offers three distinct modes; a Focus Mode (16-inches), a Tactical Mode (21.5-inches), and an Arena Mode (24-inches).

Under the hood, the concept is based on the Legion Pro 7i, pairing Intel Core Ultra processors with NVIDIA’s flagship GeForce RTX 5090 Laptop GPU. Built on NVIDIA’s Blackwell architecture, the RTX 50-series brings AI-driven performance boosts, DLSS 4 support, and enhanced graphics fidelity aimed at both competitive gaming and content creation. Furthermore, Lenovo AI Engine+ dynamically tunes CPU and GPU performance and is said to help maximise frame rates and stability during competitive play.

The tech giant also showcased an AI Frame Gaming Display concept featuring built-in AI tools such as scene detection, cursor tracking, real-time gameplay guidance, and adaptive ambient lighting that reacts to in-game events. The concept focuses on improving situational awareness and player performance rather than raw specs alone.

Lenovo is also expanding its handheld ambitions with the Legion Go powered by SteamOS, marking the company’s "most powerful" handheld device to ship natively with Valve’s operating system. Featuring an 8.8-inch PureSight OLED display, the device is powered by up to an AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme processor, paired with up to 32GB of LPDDR5X memory and up to 2TB of PCIe SSD storage, with further expansion via microSD.

Moreover, the new Legion 7a combines AMD"s latest Ryzen AI 400 Series processors with NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50-series Laptop GPUs in a lighter, thinner design aimed at gaming, streaming, and technical workloads. Lenovo AI Engine+ manages power, thermals, and performance, supported by Legion Coldfront: Hyper cooling and the PureSight OLED display.

The company also refreshed the Legion 5 range, offering both AMD and Intel configurations with RTX 50-series graphics, OLED displays, and AI-tuned performance for gaming, creation, and everyday productivity. The Lenovo LOQ 15AHP11 and LOQ 15IPH11 round out the line-up, combining AMD Ryzen 200 Series or Intel Core Ultra processors with NVIDIA RTX 50-series Laptop GPUs and Hyperchamber Cooling. Both models offer up to a 15.3-inch WQXGA display.

In terms of pricing and availability, the Legion Go powered by SteamOS is expected to start at $1,199 and will be available from June 2026. The Legion 7a (16-inch) is priced from $1,999, with availability beginning in April 2026. Lenovo’s refreshed Legion 5 range will also launch in April 2026, with the Legion 5i (15-inch) starting at $1,549, while the Legion 5a will be available from $1,499 with AMD Ryzen AI 400 Series processors or from $1,299 with AMD Ryzen 200 Series processors.

Finally, the Lenovo LOQ 15AHP11 is expected to start at $1,149 and will also arrive in April 2026, while the LOQ 15IPH11 will be released in select markets only, with regional availability and pricing varying accordingly. For further information, head over to the dedicated webpage here.

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