Mobile World Congress 2026 is just ramping up over in Barcelona, and Lenovo has arrived with a cadre of new laptops, tablets, and other gadgets. While I’m sure there are plenty of people glad to see a new Yoga 9i 2-in-1 Aura Edition, the company’s most interesting hardware probably isn’t coming to a Best Buy anytime soon. For one, there’s that folding gaming tablet-handheld-thing . The Legion Go Fold combines a similar layout to the ThinkPad X1 Fold with explicit gaming sensibilities: an 11.6-inch folding screen, an iPad-style folio keyboard case (with somewhat cringey “urban camo”), and a set of controller grips that turn it handheld with an enormous screen. You can also play it with the screen folded in half backwards, making it a smaller “traditional handheld when space is tight.” (Weird to call it “traditional” in a market segment that’s not even 5 years old yet, but okay.) Lenovo This is a genuinely cool idea! Not only can it fold down to be a lot more compact than some other giant handhelds, it can use that folding screen as a natural splitscreen mode, gameplay on top and a secondary window (like, say, a guide or a live chat) on the bottom. It’s also packing some novel hardware under the screen. The Intel Core Ultra 7 258V makes this one of the only Intel-based handhelds on the market (the only other one from a major brand is the MSI Claw), and the incorporation of the Legion Go’s mouse-style “FPS Mode” controller is neat. But alas, this is only a concept—and considering how expensive the Legion Go 2 is , it seems unlikely that Lenovo would add to that issue with a complex and pricey folding screen. Lenovo Another one announced at MWC is the AI Work Companion, an evolution of smart home-style displays that Lenovo has made in the past. This little bonus screen sits on your desk, mostly looking like a retro clock or an animated doodle, and activates an “AI” agent of your choosing with a big red button. It also doubles as a charging dock. Even as an “AI” curmudgeon, I have to admit that this is probably an ideal way to interact with such things in a tangible way (instead of a dozen mini-apps or sidebars). But just like the Legion Go Fold, this is a concept. Lenovo Lenovo also has a version of this that’s actually a little Pixar-ish robot, the “ AI Workmate Concept ,” which… no. Just no. Don’t make stuff on my desk move on its own, please. I’m clumsy enough! I don’t need things swinging and swatting around. Check out the Yoga Book Pro 3D (the lead image above), which uses a lenticular glasses-free 3D display for its primary screen and a full OLED display on the keyboard deck (well, the spot on a laptop that would normally be a keyboard) to give you a dual-screen layout. I really like its creator-focused vibes, accented by the sleek but functional kickstand that puts the bottom screen at an ideal angle for using a stylus to draw. Look at those little physical button thingamabobs you can stick to the bottom screen! I want those SO BAD! Lenovo You can even use “snap-on pads” to add physical controls, great for 3D modeling or art software, without covering the entire display with a keyboard. This is a great idea for on-the-go creators, who want some physicality when using those tools. It’s powered by a Core Ultra 7 and an RTX 5070, giving it plenty of juice for all that work. But again, this is just a concept . If you’re tired of hearing that, you’re not the only one! Lenovo makes a lot of concept devices—you can see the expanding rolling display on a Legion gaming laptop from CES for an example. They generally create several every year. But with the possible exception of the Legion Go Fold, all of these seem doable, if not exactly mass market (especially with prices for nearly all consumer tech going up and up). And to be fair, there are sometimes wild Lenovo designs that do make it into consumers’ hands, like the aforementioned ThinkPad X1 Fold or any number of ThinkBook Plus designs that push the envelope every year. I only wish more of Lenovo’s wild hairs would get the same treatment, so we can see which would work and which wouldn’t out in the real world.