Lenovo Legion Pro Rollable debuts at CES 2026 with a roll-out ultra-wide OLED display

Danny Weber

11:40 08-01-2026

© Lenovo

At CES 2026, Lenovo unveiled the Legion Pro Rollable, a concept gaming laptop featuring a roll-out ultra-wide OLED display that expands from 16 to 24 inches.

Lenovo may have just unveiled the most unconventional gaming device in years. At CES 2026, the company introduced the Legion Pro Rollable concept — the first gaming laptop with a roll-out ultra-wide OLED display. While the ThinkBook Plus Rollable stretched vertically, this prototype goes sideways, turning a standard 16-inch panel into 21.5 or even 24 inches.

The standout trick is a dual-motor tensioning system that unfurls the screen almost silently and keeps the OLED perfectly flat. Lenovo says this design reduces vibrations, glare, and creases — issues early rollable displays struggled with. For a gaming laptop, that’s crucial: any distortion jumps out the moment the action ramps up, and this approach looks designed to keep the picture clean.

When closed, the Legion Pro Rollable behaves like a standard 16-inch laptop — what Lenovo calls Focus mode. Partially extend the panel and you get Tactical Mode at 21.5 inches, pitched as a way to train peripheral vision and coordinate with teammates. Push it all the way to Arena mode at 24 inches, and the company envisions it standing in for a separate ultra-wide monitor, giving esports players a full workspace on the move.

Under the hood, the concept keeps pace with Lenovo’s flagship gaming rigs. It’s built around a Legion Pro 7i–class platform with high-end Intel Core Ultra processors and GPUs up to a mobile RTX 5090. Still, this is a concept: no launch window or pricing yet, though Lenovo’s experience with the ThinkBook Rollable suggests ideas like this often make it to commercial release.

If the technology reaches mass production, rollable screens could be the missing link for gamers who want more screen real estate without hauling an extra monitor. The promise is simple: big-screen immersion when you need it, compact portability when you don’t — a trade-off that’s hard to ignore.