This year at CES 2026, Lenovo introduced a whole range of concept devices, as it often does. For the most part, these are products that won't actually be sold, but the tech may show up in a shipping product down the line.

Lenovo Legion Pro Rollable Concept

To me, the Legion Pro Rollable Concept is the coolest one. We've seen laptops with rollable displays from Lenovo before, including the most recent ThinkBook Plus. The ones we've seen have extended vertically though, while this one extends horizontally.

It's an ultra-wide screen on a laptop, which is awesome. For a concept, it makes sense for a gaming PC, but the productivity applications are there too. I'd love to see this on a real product.

Lenovo ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept

Like I said, Lenovo actually shipped a rollable-screen laptop last year with the ThinkBook Plus Gen 6. What makes the ThinkPad Rollable XD Concept different is that part of the screen actually rolls over the top.

When it's closed, you can see various widgets there that you can access. And when it's open, the lid is actually transparent so you can see the fiber cables keeping the display tight.

While this one is cool, it might not be quite as practical as a rollable display that rolls horizontally like the Legion Pro.

Lenovo Smart Sense Display Concept

The Lenovo Smart Sense Display Concept is a hub for all of your devices. You're greeted by a message that asks you if you want to connect to your phone, tablet, laptop, or anything else, and with a click, you're there. It's wireless and it's seamless.

This is something I can imagine Lenovo building into a product one day. It's just some smarts built into a monitor.

Lenovo ThinkBook Plus Gen 7 Auto Twist

The Lenovo ThinkBook Plus Gen 7 Auto Twist isn't technically a proof of concept, because you'll be able to buy one. Indeed, ThinkBook Plus is the brand that Lenovo uses to actually sell its concepts. They're always priced like no one should buy them, but you can, and some people do. In the first six generations, we've seen an E Ink display in the lid, a second screen in the keyboard, a detachable display that turns into an Android tablet, and a rollable screen.

This one uses the AI Twist technology that was first seen in a concept last year. It works similarly, with a camera that focuses on you and a swivel on the lid that follows you around. One thing that's different is that it can be voice controlled, so you can just tell it to open and close the lid.

The ThinkBook Plus Gen 7 is coming in June, starting at $1,649.