Unveiled today at CES 2026, Lenovo’s Legion Pro Rollable concept uses a rollable OLED panel that unrolls from both ends. A dual-motor, tension-based system drives the movement.
Lenovo has engineered it to stay smooth, controlled, and quiet.
Low-friction materials protect the panel during repeated rolling cycles. A dedicated tensioning system keeps the display evenly taut at every size.
This expanding screen defines the Legion Pro Rollable concept.
It allows one device to shift between compact portability and full tournament-scale training.
Lenovo describes it as the world’s first rollable gaming laptop.
Built to scale
The Lenovo PureSight OLED Gaming display supports three training modes. Focus Mode runs at 16 inches. Players use it for precision drills and reaction training.
Tactical Mode expands the panel to 21.5 inches.
This setting supports peripheral awareness and rotation practice. Arena Mode pushes the display to a full 24 inches.
That size mirrors the size of professional esports competition monitors.
Lenovo built the concept for athletes who travel constantly. Competitive players often train on smaller screens. They then compete on much larger displays.
Lenovo wants to remove that disconnect. The Legion Pro Rollable lets players train in conditions closer to tournament play, even while traveling.
Lenovo based the proof of concept on the Legion Pro 7i platform. It pairs Intel Core Ultra processors with an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 Laptop GPU.
The GPU runs on NVIDIA’s Blackwell architecture. It supports DLSS 4 for higher frame rates and improved visual fidelity.
The hardware targets elite competitive gaming. Lenovo also positions the system for creators. NVIDIA Studio support enables faster rendering and AI-assisted creative workflows.
AI-powered optimization
The concept includes Lenovo AI Engine+, powered by Lenovo’s LA Core system. Real-time scenario detection adjusts system resources automatically.
Smart FPS tuning stabilizes performance during intense gameplay. AI-driven CPU and GPU tuning pushes frame rates higher when pressure peaks.
Lenovo has not announced pricing or a launch timeline. The Legion Pro Rollable remains a proof of concept.
Still, its CES 2026 debut signals Lenovo’s ambition to redefine portable esports training hardware.
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