Written By Divya
Published By: Divya | Published: Dec 09, 2025, 09:28 PM (IST)
Lenovo seems ready to take another big leap in experimental laptop design – this time in the gaming segment. A new report suggests that the company is preparing its first rollable gaming laptop under the Legion brand, and the idea sounds exactly as wild as it looks.
According to early leaks, the device – reportedly called the Lenovo Legion Pro Rollable – will feature a horizontally expanding OLED display that transforms into an ultrawide 21:9 screen at the press of a button. If real, this could be one of CES 2026’s most interesting announcements.
Lenovo already entered the rollable laptop space last year with the ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable, but that model expanded vertically and was clearly aimed at productivity users. The Legion Pro Rollable flips the idea – literally – by extending from the left and right edges, creating one continuous ultrawide gaming canvas. Leaked promotional material shows protective bezels around the moving parts, probably to avoid damage when the screen expands and retracts.
The ultrawide format is particularly appealing for gaming, where a 21:9 ratio offers more horizontal view, better immersion, and improved multitasking.
Most internal specs are still unknown, but early reports suggest the laptop may ship with:
The chassis appears to resemble Lenovo’s 15-inch or 16-inch gaming laptop frames, based on leaked renders showing a built-in number pad.
As for pricing, nothing has been reported yet – but considering Lenovo’s first rollable laptop launched at around $3,300 (roughly ₹2.97 lakh), this gaming-focused model is also likely to land in the premium range.
If Lenovo follows its usual pattern, the Legion Pro Rollable could be teased or fully revealed at CES 2026, which is only weeks away. A wider commercial release may come later in early 2026.
Given Lenovo’s track record with experimental hardware – and the success of last year’s rollable ThinkBook – the idea of a gaming laptop with a shape-shifting display doesn’t feel too far-fetched.
Until Lenovo makes it official, all eyes are on CES.