Lenovo revealed the Legion Go Fold at Mobile World Congress 2026, a foldable gaming prototype that shifts between four distinct configurations by folding its OLED display and repositioning its detachable controllers. The 29.5 cm (11.6-inch) screen folds down the middle to create a more pocketable 19.6 cm (7.7-inch) handheld, giving it a form factor reminiscent of a clamshell Nintendo DS but powered by an Intel Core Ultra 7 258V processor and 32GB of RAM.

The four configurations are the whole point. Standard handheld mode keeps everything compact. Unfold the display fully and it expands to the complete 29.5 cm (11.6-inch) horizontal format. Rotate the screen 90 degrees, reattach the controllers to the top and bottom, and it becomes a vertical gaming machine that can split into two simultaneous displays. Prop the device up with the display half-folded and pair it with a wireless keyboard, and the detached right controller functions as a mouse, a feature borrowed from the Legion Go Gen 2, turning the whole thing into a functional laptop stand-in.

The prototype carries a 48-watt-hour battery, which works well for portable gaming but feels more limited during extended laptop-mode sessions. Lenovo is not sharing pricing or a release window, framing this as a concept rather than a near-term product. If history is any guide, the company's concepts typically take more than a year to arrive as shipping hardware, but many do eventually make it to market.