This will be the company’s second rollable machine after the ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable, which grabbed the “world’s first rollable PC” tag in January with a 14-inch OLED that rose into a 16.7-inch vertical slab for productivity grind.
According to Windows Latest, which seems to have gotten its paws on the gear early, the new Legion Pro Rollable goes the other way with a screen that expands left and right into a 21:9 aspect ratio, which fits the Legion reputation for gaming rather than office faffing.
Lenovo’s leaked promo gear shows a horizontal rollable panel that reveals extra display real estate from both edges and stretches into a tidy ultrawide shape once fully unrolled. The laptop will feature a Troubled Chipzilla Core Ultra processor, keeping it in step with other Legion kits and Intel's AI-heavy gaming pitch. An AMD variant is unknown.
As expected, the thing runs Windows 11 and will come with the usual AI antics through Lenovo’s software, including a Copilot key. Specs remain thin. The display could start at 14 or 16 inches before widening, although that is pure guesswork at this point. The refresh rate should be at least 120 Hz since the business-focused ThinkBook Rollable already hits that.
Lenovo has already nailed the gnarly engineering involved thanks to the ThinkBook’s motorised spindle, flexible POLED panel, tension frame and firmware that stops the mechanism if anything gets in the way. Repurposing that know-how for a horizontal gaming panel is a fresh twist, though Lenovo has been flogging rollables for more than three years.
The Legion Pro Rollable stores the excess panel rolled inside the left and right edges. When activated, motors push the rails outward, which pulls the hidden display sections flat across the extended frame to form a seamless ultrawide surface. The images show chunky bezels at the edges to keep the panel from taking a kicking during use.
A Legion chassis gives Lenovo extra breathing room, since gaming laptops are meatier, allowing it to house a broader roller mechanism inside the lid without turning it into a brick.
Lenovo is expected to show off the Legion Pro Rollable in early 2026, most likely at CES, where it will try to tempt competitive gamers, creators and anyone who wants a portable ultrawide without binning the traditional laptop design.