The weirdest tech we've seen at CES 2026 so farFrom color-changing nails to toilets with opinions, CES 2026 once again proved there's no such thing as too weird.Georgie PeruContributing ReporterThu, January 8, 2026 at 1:40 PM UTCCES is famous for ushering in big TVs, faster chips and serious upgrades to the tech we already use every day.It’s also where companies feel emboldened to ask some very strange questions, like whether your toilet should analyze your poop or your nails should change color on command.From experimental laptops to health tech that probably didn’t need a camera, these are the weirdest gadgets we spotted at CES 2026.Throne toilet computerThrone is a toilet-mounted computer that uses cameras and microphones to analyze your bowel movements, which is a sentence we did not expect to type this week.
Designed to establish a personal “baseline” for your bathroom habits, it aims to flag changes that could indicate digestive or metabolic issues, including for people on GLP-1 drugs.We can’t speak to its effectiveness yet… but if knowledge is power, this thing might know way too much.Vivoo Hygienic FlowPad smart menstrual padVivoo looked at at-home health tracking and decided the bathroom was still underutilized.Alongside its clip-on smart toilet that analyzes your hydration by , the company also unveiled a menstrual pad infused with microfluidics that can track fertility and hormone markers once you scan it with your phone.
It’s a bold reminder that CES 2026 is fully committed to quantifying everything — even the stuff we’d rather not discuss over brunch.Lenovo Legion Pro RollableLenovo’s Legion Pro Rollable is what happens when a gaming laptop decides it wants to be a widescreen monitor mid-match.Its 16-inch display can physically expand sideways into ultra-wide formats, turning flight sims and racing games into full cockpit experiences at the press of a couple of keys.It’s impractical, faintly ridiculous and absolutely the kind of CES concept we hope survives long enough to escape the demo floor.Lenovo ThinkBook XD RollableAdvertisementAdvertisementIf the Legion Pro Rollable is excessive, the ThinkBook XD Rollable is philosophically confusing.
Its flexible display doesn’t just grow taller, it wraps over the lid to create a “world-facing” screen for people sitting across from you, which feels either futuristic or deeply unnecessary depending on your mood and situation (maybe this is the perfect device for hotel check-ins and other points of sale?).Still, it’s a gorgeous piece of hardware theater and proof Lenovo is determined to roll screens onto every surface it can reach.OhDoki Handy 2 ProOhDoki’s Handy 2 Pro arrived at CES with one clear message: more power, fewer limits and absolutely no chill.The upgraded sex toy model cranks battery life up to five hours and unlocks a Turbo mode so aggressive it was described as “overclocked,” which is not a term we expected to hear in this category.
It can also charge your phone, because apparently even pleasure tech needs to justify itself with productivity.iPolishiPolish finally made nail tech real, minus the dystopia and Schwarzenegger.These press-on acrylic nails use an electric charge to switch between hundreds of colors in seconds, letting you change your manicure as often as your outfit.It’s delightfully impractical, surprisingly affordable and the most convincing argument yet for treating your nails like a customizable display.Hisense S6 FollowMe displayHisense’s FollowMe display is a screen that physically follows you around the room — which no one really asked for, but CES happily delivered anyway.
Designed to reposition itself automatically so content stays in view, it feels like the logical endpoint of smart TVs becoming increasingly clingy.We haven’t seen it in action yet, but the idea of a display that refuses to be ignored is deeply on brand for 2026.