CNET reporters have been inside CES 2026 all week, getting a glimpse into the future with the most interesting, innovative and cutting-edge tech available. If you want to see the tech we can't stop talking about, check out our Best of CES awards in 22 categories (plus our Best Overall award), our CES hub and our live blog.
Walking the floors this year felt like both peering ahead and stepping sideways into a parallel present. The usual cast was there -- robots, electronic toys, phones, screens -- but the real story wasn't novelty. It was a mood. It was almost as if it were a collective experiment in how strange everyday life has become. Technology is no longer something we just use. It's something that watches, listens, adapts and tries to read us in mysterious and awkward ways.
Boston Dynamics Atlas
Almost ready for the factory floor
Boston Dynamics' robots epitomize CES: We've watched them evolve year by year, and they're part of the reason we've been conditioned to expect to see robots dance, fold laundry and fall on their faces every year. But this baby's almost ready to leave the nest: Atlas' humanoid body can navigate complex environments, perform repetitive tasks and adapt to doing more. I think Generative Bionics Gene.01 beats it for style, but it's still young and meant to interact with people on a different level -- Atlas is destined for a Hyundai factory.
Read more: Boston Dynamics' New Atlas Robot Makes Public Debut With Jaunty Human Walk
Watch this: Atlas Has Left the Lab! In-Person Demo of Boston Dynamics Humanoid
Beatbot RoboTurtle
Spyin' on the fishes, robot style
You wish your job let you take two months to study sea turtles; Beatbot's engineers lived the dream. True, they then had to return and continue their work: fine tuning the RoboTurtle's movements to affect undersea denizens and environments as little as possible. Because its job is monitoring their ecosystems for researchers. And for us, watching robots swim hasn't gotten old.
Read more: Yes, This Swimming RoboTurtle Is Adorable. It Also Has an Important Environmental Mission
Xgimi Titan Noir Max 4K projector
Stylish and smart
While I don't necessarily agree with reviewer Geoffrey Morrison that the Titan Noir looks like a robot dog,I do love its midcentury modern aesthetic, one that looks like it would be very much at home with high style, high-end audio equipment. And it has more than just good looks going for it. It introduces the company's new dynamic iris technology, a physical iris on the lens that stops down (gets smaller) in high-contrast scenes to decrease the spillover of the bright areas into the dark, so that the dark areas don't wash out as much as they might otherwise. I don't know how well it really works, but it's an interesting approach.
Read more: Xgimi's Titan Noir Max Projector Looks Like a Robot Dog
Cambridge Consultants Ouroboros watch concept
Timely sustainability
Samsung Music Studio 5 (LS50H)
Simple sound
Asus ROG R1 gaming display glasses
Refresh rate matters, even on your face
Watch this: Asus and Xreal Just Made ROG Gaming Glasses, and They're Smooth
Lenovo Legion Pro rollable concept
An elegant solution to the small-screen problem
Lenovo's been experimenting with various alternative laptop screen mechanisms for years, like the auto-twist and the rollable ThinkBook Plus. Many of them rolled or slid the screen vertically. The new Legion Pro rollable concept goes the other way: The sides slide out to turn an 18-inch gaming laptop screen into a 24-inch widescreen display. For gaming -- that's what the Legion brand is for -- wider is a lot more useful than taller. If it can be crammed into a 16-inch laptop, I'm there.
The Lenovo Legion Pro Rollable Concept has been selected as the winner in the Best Gaming category for the Official Best of CES 2026 Awards.
Razer Project Ava
A holographic backseat driver for your gaming and life
Razer's always good for a couple of neat concepts at every CES, though they don't necessarily work well as eventual products. The first one is Project Ava, a hologram-in-a-tube avatar that works with AI software, essentially giving your chatbot a face (and body, too). The hardware's remarkably similar to a shipping product, Lepro Ami.
On one hand, it's definitely cool-looking (if you can get past the mental cringe visual of clones in tanks), and the fact that it's holographic. On the other hand, I find things that move (or flicker) in my peripheral vision to be distracting. I would also just prefer my AI respond in bullet points. As I have been frequently told, however, I am not typical.
Read more: Razer Project Ava
Razer Project Motoko
Smart glasses for your ears
"It's not as weird as you'd think. Or maybe it is." That's how Scott Stein summarizes his impression of Razer's headphones with cameras, intended as a kind of, well, alternative to smart glasses.
One way to use them is while you game to offer real-time advice. Scott suggested they'd be good for people who have extreme prescriptions for their eyeglasses, which a lot of smart versions don't support, and he should know.
Read more: I Wore Razer's Project Motoko at CES 2026: Like Smart Glasses, but in Headphone Form
Roborock Saros Rover
Vacuuming levels up -- literally
Robot vacuums are pretty common these days, but they still have their weak spots, one of which is climbing stairs. Roborock's Saros Rover rises to the challenge thanks to jointed legs that extend to push it up a stair. It can clean those stairs as well as rise above obstacles, hop and dance. I will admit I felt like scooping it up and carrying when watching it awkwardly make its way up a staircase in the video like a toddler learning to climb.
Read more: I've Never Seen a Robot Vacuum Conquer Stairs Like This Before
RheoFit A1
The massager of my dreams
It looks unprepossessing until you see this robotic massage roller in action, but you lie on the A1 and it rolls up and down your back. Zero effort, you can take it with you and based on Bridget Carey's tryout, it looks like you get a nice stretch too. It's the perfect CES gadget, and I need one now.
Govee Ceiling Light Ultra and Sky Ceiling Light
Is it a light fixture or art?
Lollipop Star
21st-century candy
AI Barmen
If it can't taste, can it create a good drink?
Jackery Solar Mars Bot
Power that putters after you
Watch this: Lego's Star Wars Smart Bricks Are Surprisingly Delightful, but There's a Learning Curve
Lego smart bricks
They're Legos. That are really smart. What more do you need?
If I ever doubted that Scott Stein got to see all the best stuff at CES, I no longer do. Because he witnessed Lego's new smart brick technology, which recognizes other bricks, activates effects and plays music. And lights up!
They'll work with multiple Lego sets, and the first to incorporate them will be Star Wars sets in the spring.
Read more: Lego Smart Bricks Light Up With Jedi Magic In Coming Star Wars Set - and I'm Obsessed
AI-Tails smart cat food and drink station
For the cat who has everything, including health issues
I've been obsessing with cats for decades (I used to do adoptions for a rescue), and I've been looking at CES pet tech almost as long. The AI-Tails smart food and drink system for felines doesn't look perfect -- I have questions -- but at least it's bringing some useful new capabilities to your cat's table.
It can measure your cat's food and water intake, temperature and facial expressions to notice any deviations from the norm. And it's got some style, too.
Read more: This AI-Powered Smart Feeding and Drinking Station Told Me I Was a Sick Cat
Lockin V7 Max wireless lock
Look ma, no wires (and smart batteries)
Can smart locks be cool? I'm not sure, but if any qualify, it's these, which are useful for doors where you can't run wires, like apartments, and use optical wireless charging to top up. Plus, they look pretty sleek to me.
I don't know a lot about smart locks, but Ajay Kumar does, so when he calls it "ingenious," I believe him. If it's the wireless charging that appeals, the DeslocV150 Plus charges off solar power.
Read more: My Favorite CES Product Might Be This Ingenious Wireless Smart Lock
TCL RayNeo Air Pro 4
Display glasses with HDR micro-OLED screens that hit 1,200 nits of brightness
Wearable displays are a growing trend for a lot of reasons, but generally because when a display's that close to your eyes, things look huge without the corresponding physical display size. So they're great for gaming with a handheld console; Xreal's got updated glasses to pair with the Nintendo Switch 2 at the show, too, for example.
TCL's new $299 RayNeo Air Pro 4 glasses take it up a notch, bringing bright, vivid micro-OLED screens that can hit up to 1,200 nits of brightness. They're relatively inexpensive, but that's because they're wired rather than wireless.
Read more: TCL's New Display Glasses Are the First I've Seen With HDR, and the View Is Vivid
Honor Robot Phone
The flip-out camera and gimbal look distinctive, reacts to you
I've been testing robotic webcams for a while, but none of them will nod at you encouragingly or play peekaboo. Honor's Robot phone promises to, with its collapsible camera and gimbal, among (hopefully) other things. Announced as a concept in October, it arrived for in-person viewing at CES -- though no touching was allowed. I'm not sure I can fully grasp the usefulness of it, but its capabilities are not yet clear. However, it certainly earns props for being "the most unconventional phone design" Katie Collins has seen in years.
At Mobile World Congress in February, the company is supposed to divulge specs, so we'll wait and see.
Read more: Honor's Audacious Robot Phone Is Real and I Just Got a First Glimpse
Euhomy Leopard X1 ice maker
What's cooler than a plain old ice maker? One that speedruns
An ice maker always finds its way on our list of coolest products at CES -- after all, they're literally the coolest appliances in a show packed full of domestic wares. The Leopard X1 churns out "cubes of frozen water" in under 5 minutes, "a full 3 minutes faster than any other at-home bullet ice maker on the market," according to Home and Kitchen guru David Watsky, who timed it in action.
It'll be available in April for $150.
Read more: The Coolest Thing at CES? You Won't Believe How Fast This Ice Maker Makes Ice
Sweekar
You can't lose marrying cutesy and nostalgic
Describing it as "a Tamagotchi-inspired pocket pet, an AI companion that grows physically bigger as it matures," the Sweekar starts as an egg that you hatch, revealing a screen with eyes, then grows as it ages -- and dies if you neglect it.
It will be available via Kickstarter later this year for $150.
Read more: Finally, I've Found a Worthy Successor to My Iconic '90s Tamagotchi
LG CLOiD
This home robot doesn't just fold laundry -- it can empty the dishwasher and do some light cooking, too
We've been seeing boatloads of domestic laundry-folding robot concepts at CES over the years (or cleaning, lawn mowing and so on), but this is one of the first multifunctional models to come from a major appliance manufacturer. According to the company, CLOiD can handle tasks such as "retrieving milk from the fridge, placing a croissant in the oven for breakfast and folding and stacking garments after laundering," as well as coordinate with other smart appliances in LG's ThinQ ecosystem. I have a dumb home, so I just like the aesthetics.
Read more: Everyone Wants a Robot That Folds Laundry. LG Brought Its First One to CES 2026
Donut solid state battery
A small, dense battery that could enable cheaper, safer and lighter personal transportation
Solid state batteries use a solid material to pass ions between the nodes of a battery, compared with the liquid electrolyte used by, say, alkaline and lithium batteries. The solid chemistry allows them to hold more charge in a given size battery, be less volatile and cheaper to produce, along with a host of other advantages. Donut Labs has paired with Verge Motorcycles to incorporate the new battery in its Verge TS Pro electric motorcycle.
According to CNET transportation maestro Antuan Goodwin, "Solid state battery tech making its way onto the road is a huge deal, even if motorcycles aren't your thing. The battery's advantages are even more pronounced on larger cars, where the weight savings and increased charging speeds should scale even more."
Read more: This Phone-Sized Solid State Battery Is Already Powering a Production EV
Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold
It's shipped in Asia, but we got our hands on one for the first time at the show
While it shipped elsewhere in December, the dual-folding, three-panel Galaxy Z TriFold we've been eagerly anticipating was available for us to get our grubby American paws on for the first time at CES. After using it for a while, Abrar Al-Heeti, who's tested a lot of phones over the years, said, "At last, it seems foldables are approaching their long-desired goal: a two-in-one device that fits neatly in your pocket."
It's slated to ship in the US by the end of March; the price is still unknown.
Read more: This May Be the Phone-Tablet Hybrid We've Been Waiting For