From budget to beast mode: Lenovo’s CES laptops have a rig for every gamer

At CES 2026, Lenovo showed up with a big gaming refresh that focuses less on a single exorbitant laptop and more on options for different types of gamers. But there’s one laptop concept that both confused and delighted me.
This concept is the Legion Pro Rollable (pictured above) and it’s exactly what it looks like. It starts out as a 16-inch gaming laptop, but the OLED screen can physically expand up to a full 21.5 inches or 24 inches. Lenovo says it’s aimed at on-the-go esports players who train on large monitors. Internally, it’s based on the Legion Pro 7i and packs top-tier Intel Core Ultra chips and an RTX 5090 laptop GPU.

Lenovo
The Legion 7a is thinner and lighter than last year’s model, runs AMD’s new Ryzen AI 400 processors, and pairs them with Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 50-series graphics, which can push up to 125W. Lenovo is positioning it as a machine you can game on, but also use it for coding or 3D work.
The Legion 5 series is just below. You can get it with Intel or AMD processors, but either way you still get RTX 50-series GPUs, OLED displays, and Lenovo’s AI Engine+ tuning for when you want to adjust power and temperatures. This is the common option for those who want solid gaming performance without dropping tons of money.
Then there’s the LOQ line, which is aimed more at students and people buying their first gaming PC. It’s cheaper and simpler, but still fast enough to run modern games.
Prices start at $1,149 for the LOQ, while most Legion models range between $1,499 and $1,999, with a spring 2026 release.




