Lenovo Legion Pro Rollable concept gaming laptop’s 16 inch screen expands to 24 inches

by · Liliputing

Earlier this month we learned that Lenovo may be preparing to introduce a new gaming laptop with an expandable display that gives you more horizontal screen space without the need for an external monitor. Now Windows Latest has published more details about the Lenovo Legion Pro Rollable.

According to the site, Lenovo will showcase the laptop as a concept laptop at CES in January. But like many Lenovo concepts we’ve seen in recent years, the prototype will be a functional device that could eventually come to market. In this case we’re looking at a laptop with the specs of a high-end gaming notebook and a rollable display that expands from 16 inches to 24 inches.

Lenovo has yet to confirm that it’s working on a gaming laptop with a rollable display, but according to Windows latest, the Legion Pro Rollable looks like a normal gaming laptop when the screen is rolled up. But Lenovo is positioning the concept laptop as a solution for eSports pros looking for a widescreen (or ultra-widescreen) experience while practicing on the go.

Thanks to a rollable OLED display and dual motors, the screen can extend outward from the left and right sides of the laptop. It can be positioned for use in three views:

  • Focus Mode – 16 inches
  • Tactical Mode – 21.5 inches
  • Arena Mode – 24 inches

The idea is that you can use the laptop like a normal notebook in focus mode, expand the screen part way to help with peripheral awareness, or fully extend to 24 inches for immersive gaming.

Personally I still think it’d be great to get this kind of technology into a laptop designed for productivity, giving you the ability to position multiple apps in side-by-side screens. And you certainly could think of the Legion Pro Rollable as a system that could be used as a mobile workstation-class computer and not just a gaming laptop.

But it’s likely to be very expensive if and when it comes to market. The laptop is said to feature a high-end Intel Core Ultra processor and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 graphics. And  Windows Latest says the concept laptop is based on the Lenovo Legion Pro 7i. That’s already an expensive laptop that currently sells for $2600 and up, with prices for models sporting RTX 5090 graphics starting at closer to $4,000. And that’s before you factor in the cost of a rollable display.

More details should be revealed at CES 2026, if not sooner.