Lenovo is expanding its Legion gaming lineup at CES 2026 with new laptops, handhelds and proof-of-concept hardware aimed at competitive, mobile and student gamers.
The updates span premium Legion gaming laptops, a new SteamOS-powered handheld and experimental display concepts, highlighting Lenovo’s continued investment in performance-first gaming hardware.
One of the most eye-catching announcements is the Legion Pro Rollable Concept, a high-end gaming laptop built around a rollable OLED display that can expand from 16 inches to 21.5 inches and up to 24 inches.
Lenovo positions the concept as a training-focused device for esports athletes, allowing users to replicate tournament-sized displays while still carrying a portable system.
The rollable display is paired with top-tier internal hardware, including Intel Core Ultra processors and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50-series laptop graphics, positioning it as a showcase rather than a near-term consumer product.
Alongside the rollable concept, Lenovo is also previewing an AI Frame Gaming Display proof of concept designed to provide contextual on-screen assistance during gameplay.
The display uses AI features such as scene detection, cursor tracking and adaptive lighting to surface key information without pulling players away from the action.
For handheld gaming, Lenovo is introducing the Legion Go powered by SteamOS, marking its most powerful handheld to ship natively with Valve’s operating system.
The device combines an AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme processor with an 8.8-inch OLED display, targeting players who want a console-style experience with full access to their Steam library.
On the laptop side, Lenovo is refreshing its core Legion range with the Legion 7a, built around AMD Ryzen AI 400 Series processors and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50-series GPUs.
The Legion 7a is positioned as a versatile machine for gaming, streaming and technical workloads, with Lenovo AI Engine+ dynamically adjusting power and thermals based on usage.
Further down the lineup, updated Legion 5i and Legion 5a models target gamers who want strong performance in lighter, more mobile designs.
Lenovo is also expanding its LOQ range with new entry-level gaming laptops aimed at students balancing coursework and gaming.
Across the Legion lineup, Lenovo is emphasising improved cooling, OLED display quality and AI-assisted performance tuning rather than major design overhauls.
Pricing and availability vary across the range, with most Legion laptops expected to launch in spring 2026 and the SteamOS-powered Legion Go arriving later in the year.
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