A foldable gaming handheld and modular dual-screen laptop headline Lenovo's six concept devices unveiled at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona this week.
The company confirmed its Legion Go Fold Concept after leaks surfaced last week, while introducing a radically reconfigurable ThinkBook Modular AI PC that challenges traditional laptop design. The ThinkBook Modular AI PC features two displays that combine for approximately 19 inches of screen space. One screen detaches from the main unit and can be positioned independently, while pogo-pin connectors handle power and data transfer between modules.
This configuration allows users to move the keyboard and secondary display freely, adapting to different environments or workloads.
Lenovo's other concepts include a glasses-free 3D laptop aimed at creators and two AI companion devices for workspaces. The Yoga Book Pro 3D Concept targets 3D designers with dual Lenovo PureSight Pro Tandem OLED displays that support 2D-to-3D conversion using proprietary AI software.
For actual product launches, the Yoga 9i 2-in-1 Aura Edition arrives in May starting at $1,949 with Intel Core Ultra Series 3 processors. Gaming options include the $2,299 Legion 7a Gen 11 laptop launching in July with AMD Ryzen AI Max+ chips and integrated Radeon graphics, plus an updated $849 Legion Tab Gen 5 gaming tablet.
The company also introduced its Qira personal AI agent that will roll out to more than 20 Lenovo and Motorola devices starting in coming weeks. First wave support covers six languages across nine regions including English, Spanish, French, Italian, German and Portuguese markets.
Budget options include the $799 IdeaPad Slim 5i Ultra arriving in October and a $599 IdeaPad Slim 3i with a 17-inch display. For students, the $419 Idea Tab Pro Gen 2 tablet features a Snapdragon 8s Gen 4 chip and becomes Lenovo's first device to include Qira AI assistance later this year.
Business users get new ThinkPad models shipping in April, with the T14s 2-in-1 following in May. A $499 industrial tablet called ThinkTab X11 targets logistics, manufacturing and construction workers with rugged features for frontline operations.
While concepts like the foldable Legion Go remain experimental prototypes without guaranteed commercial release dates, they signal Lenovo's exploration of flexible form factors beyond traditional clamshell designs.















