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Antonio G. Di Benedetto
You can finally buy Lenovo’s rollable-screen laptop.

Remember the Lenovo ThinkBook Gen 6 rollable laptop from CES? After all these months, it’s now for sale. It starts at $3,299 with an Intel Lunar Lake chip, 32GB of RAM, and 1TB SSD, and that flexible OLED that expands from 14 to 16.7 inches.

I’m expecting a review unit very soon. What do you want to know about it?

Lenovo Legion Go S review part two: you were the chosen one!

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Testing the $599 and $829 SteamOS models.

Sean HollisterCommentsComment Icon Bubble
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Thomas Ricker
PC demand in US plummets on tariff fears.

Demand for PCs in the US has cooled significantly from the spike saw in the first quarter, as demonstrated in the chart below. “What we’re witnessing here might highlight US PC demand slowing down in anticipation of the import tariffs looming deadline,” says IDC in its latest quarterly report. Lenovo dominated Q2 2025 with an estimated 24.8 precent global share of “desktops, notebooks, and workstations.” Apple placed 4th after a big 21.4 percent jump in year-over-year shipments. HP ranks 2nd, Dell 3rd, and Asus comes in at 5th.

Chart: IDC
Lenovo Chromebook Plus 14 review: the new king of Chromebooks

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Verge Score

An OLED display, a fast processor, 16GB of RAM, and all-day battery life for $749? That’s a lot to like.

Antonio G. Di BenedettoCommentsComment Icon Bubble
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Richard Lawler
Is adding SteamOS enough to ‘fix’ the Legion Go S?

Now that SteamOS 3.7.8 has added official support for Lenovo’s handheld gaming PC, as well as a recovery image for installation on other handhelds like the Rog Ally and original Legion Go, it’s time to find out.

YouTuber Dave2D seems impressed, saying the Steam version has better performance than the Windows version in some games, and better performance in some games than the Steam Deck OLED -- albeit with more wattage required.

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Dominic Preston
‘The challenge is not the tariff itself, it’s the uncertainty.’

So says Lenovo CEO Yang Yuanqing in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, arguing the company can “adjust quickly” to tariff changes, but only if it knows “what the end game is.”

Yuanqing estimates tariffs have cost Lenovo more than $15 million, even with exemptions for computers and phones, and says that while the company won’t stop manufacturing in China, it may diversify to become more “resilient.”

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Antonio G. Di Benedetto
I love a ridiculously oversized calculator.

The Lenovo ThinkBook Flip concept has another fun trick up it’s sleeve besides its foldable display. Its trackpad has hidden LED icons built into it, allowing you to summon three layers of controls and handy shortcuts.

My favorite was using it as a number pad and calling up the calculator app on the laptop’s giant 18.1-inch screen, but it has other (more useful) features too — including custom user-defined ones.

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Antonio G. Di Benedetto
Lenovo’s concept monitor and USB hub offer plug-in discrete NPUs for AI work.

Lenovo announced two concept AI accessories at Mobile World Congress 2025. The pair of devices, creatively named AI Display and AI Stick, have built-in NPUs capable of 32 TOPS, allowing users to do local AI work on just about any computer plugged in via USB.

Like other Lenovo proofs of concept, we don’t know if the AI Display or AI Stick will ever come to market — but there’s a chance.

<em>Yep, that looks like a monitor. But inside the Lenovo AI Display concept is a dedicated NPU.</em>
<em>It’s like a USB hub, but instead of any helpful ports you just get 32 TOPS of NPU performance.</em>
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Yep, that looks like a monitor. But inside the Lenovo AI Display concept is a dedicated NPU.
Image: Lenovo
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Antonio G. Di Benedetto
Lenovo is testing glasses-free computers with a ring controller.

Lenovo’s new ThinkBook 3D Laptop Concept and Hybrid Dimensional 34-inch Curved Monitor Concept, announced at Mobile World Congress 2025, use directional backlighting and head tracking to simultaneously show 2D and 3D content without glasses. An accompanying AI Ring concept can be worn to control them with gesture-based spatial controls.

It sounds like Leia’s tech, but Lenovo reps would not confirm during my short demo.

Maybe 3D is coming back? (I doubt it.)

<em>I briefly saw a version of this tech demoed on a ThinkBook 16 with a magnetic Magic Bay Dual Camera Concept attached. On the right was a 2D presentation and on the left was a 3D music video playing.</em>
<em>The 3D effect doesn’t show in pictures, but it looked... okay. And looking at the screen off-axis shows some artifacts.</em>
<em>The Magic Bay Dual Camera Concept is a chunky attachment on this sizable laptop.</em>
<em>The Hybrid Dimensional 34-inch Curved Monitor looks like a modded Lenovo Legion Pro 34WD-10 gaming monitor.</em>
<em>The ThinkBook 3D Laptop Concept has the dual camera for head tracking built in. I didn’t get to see this, but here’s Lenovo’s rendering.</em>
Lenovo AI ring concept
<em>I guess you can pretend you’re in </em><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33Raqx9sFbo" target="_blank">Minority Report</a><em> with these things.</em>
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I briefly saw a version of this tech demoed on a ThinkBook 16 with a magnetic Magic Bay Dual Camera Concept attached. On the right was a 2D presentation and on the left was a 3D music video playing.
Photo: Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge
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Dominic Preston
A laptop that flips, then flips again.

Lenovo is about to release a folding laptop called the ThinkBook Flip, according to leaker Evan Blass. And yes, we know every laptop folds, but this one does it twice: once at the regular hinge, and then again halfway down the display, which folds outwards when the laptop shuts.

It follows the $3,499 ThinkBook Plus Gen 6, a laptop with a rollable screen that goes on sale in June.

<em>The ThinkBook Flip’s display folds in half.</em>
<em>Giving you a huge screen when it’s open...</em>
<em>...and some durability concerns when it’s shut.</em>
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The ThinkBook Flip’s display folds in half.
Image: evleaks
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Andrew Liszewski
Lenovo’s Charging Connector for the Legion Go is finally here.

Originally announced last August with an expected release in October 2024, Lenovo’s wedge-shaped Charging Connector is finally available for $49.99.

Similar to the Switch’s Joy-Con grip, the accessory turns the Legion Go’s controllers into a single gamepad with a longer-lasting 2,850mAh battery. And while it’s rumored that the new Legion Go 2’s controllers will be backwards compatible with the original, it’s not known if this charging accessory will also be.

<em>Lenovo’s Charging Connector for the Legion Go turns its removable controllers into a single gamepad.</em>
<em>The Charging Connector includes its own 2,850mAh battery that can be charged with a USB-C cable, and functions as a charging hub for the connected controllers.</em>
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Lenovo’s Charging Connector for the Legion Go turns its removable controllers into a single gamepad.
Image: Lenovo
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Sean Hollister
Lenovo’s real, actually-going-on-sale rollable laptop is delightful in person.

A real expanding screen straight out of science fiction! Antonio, Andrew and I couldn’t stop grinning, particularly as Lenovo encouraged us to just use the $3500 ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 instead of treating it like some fragile prototype.

Don’t get me wrong, it’s a tad awkward because Windows doesn’t officially support expanding screens, but an invisible multimonitor hack seems to work. Get on it, Microsoft!

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Sean Hollister
Up close with the SteamOS-powered Lenovo Legion Go S.

Physically, and on paper, I would pick this one over the original Legion Go in a heartbeat. It feels so much better — and it’s the first third-party handheld with SteamOS, which vastly improves that feel.

Sorry I couldn’t provide any performance or battery impressions, though: this unit has an old Z1 Extreme chip inside, no intensive games on display, not even a Portal 2 savegame.

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Quentyn Kennemer
Lenovo updates its smart glasses.

The second-gen Lenovo Legion Glasses pull the same magic trick as the original — putting a 1.26-inch full HD MicroOLED USB-C display in front of your eyeballs — but with a stylish new prescription-ready aviator frame that’s lighter at 65 grams.

The display now supports up to a 120Hz refresh rate, a 98 percent DCI-P3 color gamut, and is significantly brighter at 800 nits (up from 270 nits).

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Antonio G. Di Benedetto
Lenovo’s new Legion Pro 7i 16 gaming laptop has a 240Hz OLED and RTX 5090 GPU.

The new 16-inch Legion Pro 7i, announced at CES, features Nvidia 50-series GPUs and up to an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX. It will start at $2,399 when it launches in March.

There’s a lot of intriguing new gaming laptops in this range, but not all of them offer a 2560 x 1600 240Hz OLED in all configurations.

The 16-inch Lenovo Legion Pro 7i laptop with purple RGB lighting on its keyboard and front lip.
The front of the Legion Pro 7i laptop, showing a bright display and lit keyboard.
A downward view of the laptop, showing the keyboard as described in the caption.
The laptop with two “Legions” printed on its back.
A side view of the laptop featuring the ports mentioned in the caption.
A side view of the laptop featuring the ports in question.
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The Legion Pro 7i 16 can be configured with up to 2TB of storage and 64GB of RAM.
Image: Lenovo
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Allison Johnson
“We are alive and well.”

Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is at Lenovo’s Tech World conference announcing a partnership with... AMD? We’ll hear more about the “x86 Ecosystem Advisory Group” that they’re founding, but for now he’s assuring us that rumors of the x86’s demise have been greatly exaggerated.

Photo: Allison Johnson / The Verge
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Sean Hollister
Lenovo’s new AMD laptops are skipping the US and Canada — save this one.

The ThinkPad T14s Gen 6, which launched as a Snapdragon laptop, will get a $1,699 AMD Zen 5 variant in October with an undisclosed Ryzen AI Pro chip.

North America won’t get: €699 IdeaPad Slim 5 with AMD Ryzen 7000; €1699 Yoga Pro 7 with AMD Ryzen AI 9 365 and a 14.5-inch 600-nit OLED; €999 ThinkBook 16 Gen7+ with Ryzen AI 9 365.

The ThinkPad T14s Gen 6. Find specs for these machines at the bottom of this press release.
The ThinkPad T14s Gen 6. Find specs for these machines at the bottom of this press release.
Image: Lenovo
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Sean Hollister
At $749, Lenovo’s ThinkBook 16 is the cheapest Qualcomm Copilot Plus PC yet.

It features Qualcomm’s new budget 8-core chip underneath a 16-inch 2K 60Hz, 300-nit IPS display — with “up to” 32GB RAM and 1TB storage. It does come standard with an big 84Wh battery.

Lenovo’s other new Qualcomm is the $850 IdeaPad 5x 2-in-1. It has a brighter 14-inch 400-nit OLED display, but a smaller 57Wh battery and only one USB-C.

A shiny silver laptop with a numpad.
The ThinkBook 16 Gen 7 is coming October. Find specs for these machines at the bottom of this press release.
Image: Lenovo