CES 2026 day 3: the 11 best gadgets we've seen today, from IKEA smart lights to the Motorola Razr Fold

CES 2026 day 3
(Image credit: Nuralogix / IKEA / Dreame)

TechRadar will be extensively covering this year's CES, and will bring you all of the big announcements as they happen. Head over to our main CES page for the latest stories and our hands-on verdicts on everything from 8K TVs and foldable displays to new phones, laptops, smart home gadgets, and the latest in AI.

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If our first day and second day round-ups of the best of CES 2026 weren't enough for you, we're now back with highlights of the third day from the show floor in Las Vegas – and there's still an awful lot to see.

Our CES 2026 live blog is also available to keep you right up to date with everything that's happening and being unveiled at CES 2026, but these are our picks from the third day at the show – and it's another impressively diverse and innovative list of tech.


1. Motorola Razr Fold

  • Best feature: It supports a stylus

The Motorola Razr Foldd's back and external screen

The Motorola Razr Fold (Image credit: Motorola / Future)

There's another book-style foldable in town: Motorola has been making flip foldables for a few years at this point, but now it has the Razr Fold to directly challenge the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 and the Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold – and it's been unveiled at CES 2026.

The key specs you need to know about are the 8.1-inch main display, the 6.6-inch cover screen, and the five cameras that are attached, led by a 50MP main camera. It also apparently has something that its rivals don't offer: support for stylus input.


2. IKEA Varmblixt LED Lamp

  • Best feature: A design that's good enough to eat

IKEA Varmblixt smart lights

IKEA has a new smart light for you (Image credit: IKEA)

IKEA's smart home push continues at CES 2026, and the Swedish company has been showing off some new models in the Varmblixt smart light series – including a donut-shaped LED lamp with colors that you can set to softly shift over time.

You can mount the donut light on a wall or stand it on a table, and there's a remote you can use to control it instead of your phone. Also of note: a dinky new IKEA Bluetooth speaker that will cost you less than $10 in the US (that's roughly £7.45 / AU$14.85).


3. Lenovo Legion Pro Rollable

  • Best feature: It has a screen that rolls out!

Lenovo Legion Pro Rollable laptop on a red desk

(Image credit: Future)

Now this is exactly the sort of gadget that CES is made for: a laptop with a rollable display that expands when you need some more screen space. It's called the Lenovo Legion Pro Rollable, and its screen size goes from 16 inches to 23.8 inches at the push of a button.

As the Legion label gives away, this is a gaming laptop, and top-tier titles should be able to make the most of that expandable display. Under the hood you can max this out with an Nvidia RTX 5090 and an Intel Core Ultra 9 processor if you want the very best spec.


4. L'Oréal Light Straight

  • Best feature: Infrared light technology

L'Oreal Light Straight + multi-styler

(Image credit: Future)

The L'Oréal Light Straight + Multi-styler might be a bit of a mouthful to say, but it looks like an incredible bit of kit: a hair straightener that makes use of infrared light, so it works at lower temperatures and should in theory be a lot better for the health of your hair.

As per L'Oréal's pitch, this works three times faster than its leading competitors, and leaves hair twice as smooth – what's not to like? Well, the only bad news is that it's not expected to be available to buy until next year, but from what we've seen so far it'll be worth the wait.


5. Roborock Saros Rover

  • Best feature: A robovac with legs

Roborock rover being demoed

(Image credit: Future)

Tech companies are solving all sorts of problems at CES 2026, including a long-standing robot vacuum issue: what happens when your cleaning bot reaches the stairs? Roborock now has a solution in the form of the Saros Rover, with two stair-climbing legs attached.

Those legs also enable it to turn around quickly and tackle a variety of uneven surfaces, so your home gets cleaned more thoroughly than ever before. It's not the first robovac with legs to appear, but it might be the best one yet – though it's not clear when it'll launch.


6. NuraLogix Longevity Mirror

  • Best feature: No watches or wrist trackers required

Nuralogix longevity mirror

(Image credit: Nuralogix)

In our round-up of the best health gadgets at CES 2026 you'll find mention of the impressive NuraLogix Longevity Mirror, a mirror that's able to assess a whole range of health-related metrics – including heart rate, blood pressure, and physiological age.

It does this through a combination of a built-in camera and some sophisticated AI algorithms that analyze the blood flow patterns in your face. The starting price isn't cheap though: it's said to be $899 (roughly £660 / AU$1,330), and a subscription is also needed.


7. Sunbooster

  • Best feature: Well-being while indoors

Sunbooster device

(Image credit: SunLED Life Science)

The second entry that we'd like to highlight from our CES health gadgets round-up is the Sunbooster. The idea here is that this little gizmo projects near-infrared light at your face while you're stuck indoors on a laptop, a bit like a SAD lamp in the form of a webcam.

It's based on studies that have suggested that exposure to this kind of light leads to multiple well-being benefits, and you can choose between two and four hours of exposure a day. Pricing for this has been set at €199, which is about $235 / £175 / AU$350.


8. Dreame Leaptic Cube

  • Best feature: The compact, modular design

Dreame Leaptic Cube action camera held by a woman, posing with another woman

(Image credit: Dreame)

There have been plenty of CES 2026 innovations with cameras as well, and in this vein we present to you the Dreame Leaptic Cube. Capable of up to 8K recording, it's a little action camera that you can take anywhere with you, and it has modular attachments too.

You even get built-in, AI-powered gyro stabilization, which isn't usually on offer with cameras of this size, and it can apparently last for 200 minutes between charges. We're still waiting on pricing, but it looks like an intriguing gadget that we're keen to test out.


9. Klipsch Atlas Series headphones

  • Best feature: The return of a legend

Klipsch Atlas Series headphones, left to right: HP-3, HP-2 and HP-1 on a grey background

(Image credit: Klipsch)

Over in audio land, we have the first new Kipsch over-ear headphones in more than a decade, courtesy of the Klipsch Atlas Series headphones. They've been released to help celebrate the 80th anniversary of the company behind both Klipsch and Onkyo.

These headphones look as though they'll be worth the wait, too. There are three new models, led by the flagship HP-3, and we're being promised superior levels of audio quality and battery life – though of course we'd like to try them out for ourselves.


10. GameSir x Hyperkin X5 Alteron

  • Best feature: The modular versatility

The Hyperkin x Gamesir X5 Alteron.

(Image credit: GameSir / HyperKin)

We've already featured a modular camera in this list, and now we've got a modular mobile controller too: the GameSir x Hyperkin X5 Alteron is the first fully modular controller we've seen go on sale, and you can switch up its components based on what you're playing.

This works with Android phones and iPhones, as well as tablets and the Nintendo Switch. As it supports Bluetooth, you can even use it with a PC if you want – taking care of all your gaming controller needs, on any device. We're still waiting on pricing details, however.


11. Tensor robocar

  • Best feature: It'll do the driving for you

Car tech always features heavily at CES, and we've been taking a look at the new robocar from Tensor. This goes beyond basic self-driving capabilities – it offers level 4 autonomy, which means no need to keep your eyes on the road, and you can hide the steering wheel.

There are 13-inch screens for every passenger, plus a host of impressive features, like its own on-board AI models, self-cleaning capabilities, and proprietary sensors. Pricing for the Tensor robocar is yet to be confirmed, but production is scheduled for the end of 2026.

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TOPICS
David Nield
Freelance Contributor

Dave is a freelance tech journalist who has been writing about gadgets, apps and the web for more than two decades. Based out of Stockport, England, on TechRadar you'll find him covering news, features and reviews, particularly for phones, tablets and wearables. Working to ensure our breaking news coverage is the best in the business over weekends, David also has bylines at Gizmodo, T3, PopSci and a few other places besides, as well as being many years editing the likes of PC Explorer and The Hardware Handbook.

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