CES 2026 made one thing clear: technology is shifting from novelty to necessity. This year’s show floor wasn’t about flashy concepts or distant promises—it was packed with products solving real problems in smarter, more human ways.
From AI that quietly works in the background to hardware that rethinks power, mobility, fitness, and the home, the best innovations focused on removing friction from everyday life. Whether it was cleaner energy, more intuitive interfaces, or devices that finally adapt to how people actually live, CES 2026 felt practical, purposeful, and refreshingly grounded. These standout products represent the ideas that didn’t merely impress in a demo—they made us rethink what technology should be doing for us right now..
JMGO O2S Ultra Projector

JMGO’s O2S Ultra pushes 3,600 ISO lumens—enough brightness to comfortably watch sports or movies with curtains open. Most living‑room projectors force compromises: too dim for daytime, too fiddly to set up, and too dependent on blackout curtains. The ultra‑short‑throw design (0.16:1) produces a 100‑inch image from roughly 6–7 inches off the wall, and automatic focus/keystone eliminates the usual alignment dance. Color performance is equally strong thanks to 110% BT.2020 coverage and support for Dolby Vision + HDR10, making it look far richer than mid‑tier lamp models.
Versus JMGO’s earlier laser UST units, the O2S Ultra emphasizes everyday usability: brighter, quieter, and quicker to calibrate, all in a more living‑room‑friendly chassis.
MSRP: $3,499
Availability: Spring 2025
BLUETTI Charger 2 — Unified Car + Solar Smart Energy Hub

Mobile power systems for RVs, vans, and overlanding rigs have long been stuck in a bottleneck: you either charge from the alternator while driving or use solar while parked. That “either‑or” setup wastes energy and forces travelers to wait hours for batteries to recover. BLUETTI’s new Charger 2 breaks that limitation with dual‑input charging, combining alternator + solar for up to 1,200W, making it 13× faster than a 12V cigarette socket and able to refill 1kWh in under an hour.
It also serves as a centralized power brain for RV and off‑grid builds, linking starter batteries, solar, loads, and expansion packs with automatic switching between driving and parked modes. New reverse‑charging features protect the vehicle battery with trickle, pulse, and even emergency jumpstart modes.
MSRP: $349 (5% off with “BLUETTI5OFF”)
Availability: Now
Povec C1 Electrochromic Sunglasses

Athletes training in variable light usually face a losing choice: lenses dark enough for open sun become useless in shade, while lighter lenses fail the moment glare hits. The Povec C1 eliminates that compromise by introducing what the company calls the world’s first consumer electrochromic sunglasses built specifically for sport.
Instead of relying on slow, UV-based photochromic reactions, the C1 lets wearers manually adjust lens tint with a touch-sensitive strip on the temple. In about one second, lenses shift across clear, yellow, or green tones with continuous opacity control from CAT 1 to CAT 3. Automotive-grade electrochromic tech, an IP65-rated TR90 frame, impact testing, and a 28-day battery life make the C1 practical for real trail runs, rides, and multi-day adventures—without cameras, notifications, or distractions.
MSRP: $250–$350
Availability: Spring 2026 (public guidance: May 2026)
Reolink Triplens Camera & AI Box

Home security cameras often miss what matters most: context. The Reolink Triplens Camera paired with its AI Box solves this by combining multiple focal lengths with local AI processing. Instead of choosing between wide coverage or zoomed detail, users get both simultaneously. The system fuses feeds in real time, tracking movement across distances without blind spots.
On-device AI means faster alerts, fewer false positives, and no reliance on constant cloud uploads. Facial recognition, vehicle detection, and zone-based alerts all happen locally, preserving privacy while improving accuracy. For homeowners tired of grainy footage and useless notifications, Reolink’s triplens approach feels like a long-overdue evolution in smart surveillance.
MSRP: TBD
Availability: Sometime in 2026
BLUETTI Elite 100 V2 Portable Power Station

Portable power stations usually force you to choose between convenience and capability. The BLUETTI Elite 100 V2 is designed to narrow that gap by focusing on reliable, everyday backup power in a form factor that’s still practical to move and store. Built around long‑life LiFePO₄ battery chemistry, it’s intended for home backup, travel, and emergency use without the maintenance concerns that come with older battery tech.
Rather than chasing extreme specs, Bluetti positions the Elite 100 V2 as a dependable middle‑ground solution — capable of running essential devices, supporting solar input, and integrating into a broader backup strategy without unnecessary complexity. It’s a thoughtful evolution of Bluetti’s portable power lineup, aimed at people who want preparedness without overkill.
MSRP: $799
Availability: August 2025
Cleer x THX ARC 4 PLUS

True wireless earbuds keep getting smaller, but long‑term comfort and sound quality often suffer as a result. The Cleer x THX ARC 4 PLUS takes a smarter route with an open‑ear, ear‑hook design that sits outside the ear canal, reducing fatigue while still delivering full, detailed audio. That makes them a strong option for workouts, commuting, or extended listening sessions where awareness matters.
The ARC 4 PLUS builds on Cleer’s earlier ARC models with refined drivers and improved tuning, delivering stronger low‑end presence and clearer mids without isolating you from your surroundings. Add in the THX‑certified sound profile and a secure, lightweight fit, and you get an everyday earbud that prioritizes comfort without sacrificing audio quality.
MSRP: $129.99
Availability: Now
Edifier M90 Compact Active Speaker

Desktop speakers are often treated like an accessory, but Edifier clearly didn’t get that memo with the M90. This compact system delivers 100W RMS total output, powered by 4‑inch long‑throw aluminum mid‑bass drivers and 1‑inch silk dome tweeters, giving it far more presence and clarity than most speakers that live on a desk.
What really separates the M90 from older Edifier desktop models is the engineering under the hood. You get end‑to‑end digital signal processing, a bi‑amped active crossover, and dynamic range control, all working together to keep sound clean and controlled even at higher volumes. It’s also Hi‑Res Audio and Hi‑Res Audio Wireless certified, with modern connectivity including Bluetooth 6.0, HDMI eARC, Optical, USB‑C, and AUX. Add app control, a 2.4GHz remote, and a compact, understated design, and the M90 feels purpose‑built for modern setups—earning its spot on our Gadget Review Best of CES 2026 list.
MSRP: $369.99
Availability: Sometime in 2026
xTool MetalFab

If you’ve ever priced out metal fabrication tools, you already know the problem: capable systems are industrial, expensive, and intimidating to use. xTool’s MetalFab is designed to lower that barrier by packaging laser welding and metal cutting into a more approachable, enclosed system aimed at makers, schools, and small shops—not factory floors.
MetalFab is available in 800W and 1200W configurations, giving buyers a clear upgrade path based on material thickness and workload. Compared to piecing together separate welding and cutting tools, MetalFab consolidates capability into a single platform, saving space and simplifying training. That’s especially appealing for education and prototyping environments, where consistency and safety matter as much as raw power.
It’s not cheap—but for what it replaces, the value equation actually makes sense.
Typical Price Range:
• 800W bundle: ~$13,999–$16,000+
• 1200W bundle: ~$15,999–$19,000+
• Education packages: ~$18,000+
Availability: Sometime in 2026
Satellai Collar Go

You know the drill when using a pet tracker. It loses signal the moment you leave the neighborhood. Satellai built the Collar Go to fix that. Instead of relying on cellular networks alone, it focuses on dependable GPS live tracking designed to work wherever your dog decides to wander.
The Collar Go supports resizable virtual boundaries with escape alerts, making it useful both at home and on the trail. It also adds activity and health monitoring, giving owners insight beyond just location. A standout feature is its adjustable starlight LED, which improves nighttime visibility without bulky add‑ons. The tracker is IP68 waterproof, compatible with any collar or harness, and rated for up to 15 days of battery life, which puts it well ahead of many pet trackers that require constant recharging.
It’s simple, affordable, and focused on reliability—exactly why it landed on our Gadget Review Best of CES 2026 list.
Price: $67.00
Availability: Sometime in 2026
UGREEN NASync iDX 6011 & 6011 Pro

Cloud storage makes life easy, but it comes at a cost—monthly fees and your data living on someone else’s servers. UGREEN’s NASync iDX 6011 flips that model entirely, bringing powerful, local AI directly to your desk. This 6‑bay NAS runs large language models on‑device, letting you search photos, documents, and videos using natural language—without sending a single file to the cloud.
Under the hood, it’s serious hardware: an Intel Core Ultra 7 255H, up to 96 TOPS of AI performance, up to 64GB LPDDR5X RAM, dual 10GbE networking, dual Thunderbolt 4 ports, and up to 160TB of raw storage across hot‑swappable bays. It’s fast enough for collaborative 8K workflows and quiet enough (29–34dB) for home studios.
This isn’t for casual backups—it’s for creators who want cloud‑level intelligence with total privacy.
Price: Starting at $999 (diskless)
Availability: Sometime in 2026
Rokid Voice-Activated AI Glasses

If smart glasses are ever going to break out of novelty status, they need to solve real, everyday problems. Rokid’s AI Glasses do exactly that by turning payments into a hands‑free experience. Integrated with Alipay+ GlassPay, the glasses let users complete transactions using voice commands, QR scanning, and iris recognition, eliminating the need to pull out a phone at checkout.
The system works seamlessly: say “pay for this,” the built‑in camera scans the QR code, iris recognition verifies identity, and the payment processes through Alipay+’s network of 1.8 billion connected accounts across 40+ payment providers. That makes them especially compelling for travel-heavy environments like airports, cafes, and tourist districts.
At $299, Rokid undercuts competing smart glasses while offering functionality that goes far beyond photos or audio playback. This kind of real-world utility is what finally pushes smart glasses toward mainstream relevance.
Price: $299
Availability: Sometime in 2026
ToughTested Powerbanks

Power banks are fine—until the power grid goes down and “fine” stops being enough. ToughTested designs its latest power banks specifically for emergency scenarios, where durability and redundancy matter more than slim profiles. The new lineup spans 10,000mAh to 20,000mAh capacities, features IP67 weatherproofing, and carries a five‑year warranty, signaling long‑term preparedness rather than disposable convenience.
What truly separates these models is the addition of hand‑crank generators on select units. No, you won’t fully recharge a phone by cranking—but you can generate enough power for critical communication during extended outages when solar or wall power isn’t available. Integrated LED flashlights, rugged housings, and fast‑charging USB‑C outputs round out the feature set.
ToughTested isn’t competing with everyday travel chargers—it’s building tools for storms, evacuations, and off‑grid emergencies.
Availability:
• Portable rugged power banks: May 2026
• Hand‑crank emergency models: June 2026
TCL X11L Mini-LED Television

If you think TV brightness has already peaked, TCL’s X11L exists to reset expectations. This is TCL’s new flagship, built around SQD (Super Quantum Dot) Mini‑LED technology that pushes an eye‑searing 10,000 nits of peak brightness paired with an astonishing 20,000 local dimming zones. The result is HDR that holds its contrast and color even in bright living rooms—something most high‑end TVs still struggle with.
The X11L doesn’t stop at picture quality. It supports 144Hz refresh rates for gaming, along with Dolby Vision, making it equally suited for next‑gen consoles and cinematic viewing. Compared to TCL’s prior Mini‑LED flagships, the X11L is a clear leap forward in both brightness and dimming precision, firmly positioning it in ultra‑premium territory.
It’s expensive out of the gate—but it delivers flagship performance to match.
Pricing:
• 75‑inch: $6,999 (coming soon)
• 85‑inch: $3,499 (available now)
• 98‑inch: $6,999 (available now)
Availability: Now (85″ & 98″), 75″ coming soon
Vantrue E360 Ace Dash Cam

Dash cams normally only capture what’s in front of your car, but the Vantrue E360 Ace exists to change that assumption. This model delivers 5.2K 360‑degree panoramic recording that covers both the road ahead and the cabin at the same time, giving you a far more complete record of what actually happens during an incident.
At the core is a Sony STARVIS 2 IMX675 sensor, paired with a quad‑core CPU for efficient processing and sharper footage in challenging lighting. Night performance is a clear focus here, with eight infrared LEDs improving cabin visibility after dark. Practical touches like 15‑second buffered motion detection, 5GHz Wi‑Fi, and support for up to 1TB microSD cards make it easier to live with day‑to‑day. Compared to traditional front‑only dash cams, the E360 Ace offers significantly broader coverage without complicated installation.
Price: $139.99
Availability: Now
homerunPET CS106 Self-cleaning Litter Box

For multi‑cat households, most self‑cleaning litter boxes simply aren’t built for the job. The homerunPET CS106 tackles that problem head‑on by prioritizing size, capacity, and reduced maintenance over gimmicks. With an 8‑liter litter capacity, it’s one of the largest self‑cleaning litter boxes available, designed to comfortably support up to four cats or a single cat weighing up to 25 pounds (11.3kg).
What really sets the CS106 apart is its automatic litter replenishment system, which allows one refill to last up to 14 days. Compared to smaller self‑cleaning boxes that require constant emptying and topping off, this dramatically cuts down on daily upkeep. The result is a system that feels purpose‑built for busy homes where litter maintenance shouldn’t be a daily chore.
It’s big, practical, and unapologetically designed around real‑world use.
Price: $699 (regularly $899)
Availability: Now
Looki L1 AI Wearable

Most wearable cameras wait for you to press record. The Looki L1 flips that model by deciding what matters on its own. This $199, 32‑gram wearable camera uses multimodal AI—combining visual, audio, and motion data—to automatically switch between Expo, Fitness, and Daily modes without user input.
At events, Expo Mode captures context and surfaces follow‑ups from conversations. Fitness Mode tracks movement and can suggest recovery cues, while Daily Mode quietly logs habits and routines. Everything processes on‑device by default, with users controlling what—if anything—uploads to the cloud. The L1 also turns captured moments into searchable vlogs and story pages, letting you ask questions like “What did I eat today?” or “Show highlights from my trip.”
Battery life ranges from 9–13 hours, it’s IP67 waterproof, and while many AI features remain in beta, the concept is compelling. It’s not perfect—but it’s one of the clearest glimpses yet of proactive AI wearables done thoughtfully.
Price: $199
Availability: Now
Acemate Tennis Robot

If finding a reliable hitting partner is harder than improving your backhand, the Acemate Tennis Robot is built to solve that problem outright. Unlike traditional ball machines that fire shots on repeat, Acemate uses AI and dual 4K cameras to actually react to your shots, returning balls in as little as 0.15 seconds based on where you place them.
On court, it’s surprisingly demanding. Acemate delivers serves up to 80 mph, supports topspin, backspin, slice, and lobs up to 8 meters high, and adapts placement to expose weaknesses—much like a real opponent. It holds 130 balls, runs for up to three hours on a swappable battery, and moves dynamically using omnidirectional wheels. The companion app adds heat maps and shot analytics, turning solo practice into tactical training.
For recreational players rated NTRP 1.0–6.0, it’s the closest thing yet to a thinking practice partner—and that’s why it earned a spot on our Gadget Review Best of CES 2026 list.
Price: $1,599 (pre‑order; MSRP $2,499)
Availability: Pre‑orders open now
Roborock Saros Rover Vacuum Cleaner

Stairs have always been the hard stop for robot vacuums—and Roborock’s Saros Rover is the first serious attempt to erase that limitation entirely. Unveiled at CES 2026, the Saros Rover uses an AI‑powered wheel‑leg architecture that doesn’t just climb stairs, but actively vacuums each step while ascending.
Two independently deployable wheel‑legs adjust height, reach, and balance in real time, allowing the Rover to navigate straight, curved, and uneven staircases while keeping its body level. Roborock’s AI balance and navigation system processes motion sensors and 3D spatial data on the fly, enabling agile turns, obstacle avoidance, and stability even when disturbed. Unlike earlier stair‑climbing prototypes that simply reached the next level, the Saros Rover is designed to clean throughout the climb.
It’s still a development‑stage device, but it’s one of the most genuinely new ideas in home robotics this year.
Price: TBD
Availability: TBD
Speediance Gym Nano

Home gyms demand a spare room. Speediance built the Gym Nano for people who don’t have one. Designed specifically for apartments and tight spaces, the Gym Nano delivers up to 220 pounds of motor‑driven digital cable resistance in a footprint small enough to store in a closet, without sacrificing full‑body strength training.
The system uses the same digitally controlled resistance found in Speediance’s larger Gym Monster line, adjustable in 1‑pound increments, but packages it in a far more portable form factor. What makes the Nano stand out, though, is how it fits into Speediance’s broader Wellness+ AI ecosystem. Workout data syncs across devices—including the VeloNix bike and new Pilates accessories—allowing training plans to adapt based on performance, recovery, sleep, and stress. Notably, Speediance bundles 300+ guided workouts without locking core features behind monthly subscriptions.
For space‑constrained users who still want serious strength training, the Gym Nano feels purpose‑built.
Price: TBD
Availability: TBD (prototype shown at CES 2026)
JisuLife Pro1 Handheld Fan

Portable fans are made to beat the heat. JisuLife is betting the Pro1 Mini can do more than that. Debuting at CES 2026, the Pro1 Mini blends personal cooling with wellness by introducing magnetic aroma pods that snap onto the fan, turning airflow into a subtle aromatherapy experience instead of just moving air.
Under the hood, a silent brushless motor keeps noise low enough for Zoom calls, offices, and shared spaces—an area where most portable fans fall apart. JisuLife’s Air‑Focus directional airflow concentrates cooling where it’s needed, while 100 adjustable wind speeds allow fine‑tuned control without the bulk of the brand’s more feature‑stuffed models. Compared to JisuLife’s Ultra series, the Pro1 Mini trades raw power for discretion and portability, clearly targeting lifestyle and wellness‑focused users.
It’s a small idea with surprisingly thoughtful execution.
Price: TBD
Availability: Spring 2026
Pawport Smart Dog Door

Basic pet doors are a security risk. Pawport built its Smart Dog Door to eliminate that anxiety. Designed to retrofit over virtually any existing pet door in seconds, it installs without professional help but delivers a level of strength and control traditional flaps simply can’t match.
The door is constructed from steel and aircraft‑grade aluminum, using a dual‑locking system with top and bottom deadbolts to keep unwanted guests out. When closed, it forms a weatherproof seal, helping maintain indoor temperature. Safety is handled thoughtfully, too, with anti‑pinch slow‑open and close operation that protects pets of all sizes. Through the app, owners can manage access, track pet activity, and integrate the door with smart home systems and voice assistants.
It’s a serious upgrade from passive pet doors—and a smart one.
Price: $699 (or as low as $31.29/month)
Availability: Now
Pliyt

Your daily commute feels more expensive than it should. Pliyt is betting that predictability—not speed—is what commuters actually want. The startup is proposing a subscription‑based robotaxi service targeting San Francisco commuters by 2028, promising rides at up to 40% less than current Uber rates by eliminating surge pricing altogether.
Rather than serving every possible trip type, Pliyt focuses narrowly on repeatable 30‑minute commuter routes, allowing autonomous fleets to optimize schedules, routes, and utilization. The pitch is simple: a flat monthly price for your regular commute, more like Spotify than ride‑hailing roulette. In a market where Uber, Waymo, and other autonomous players are racing toward broader coverage, Pliyt’s commuter‑first model stands out as a deliberate constraint rather than a limitation.
There are still open questions around technology, partners, and scale—but as a concept, it reframes robotaxis around routine, not novelty.
Price: Subscription‑based (estimated ~40% below Uber rates)
Availability: Planned for 2028
SwitchBot Onero H1 Laundry Robot

Folding laundry isn’t hard—it’s just endlessly annoying. SwitchBot’s Onero H1 is one of the first home robots that actually tries to take that chore off your plate. Debuting at CES 2026, this wheeled humanoid robot demonstrated real, practical tasks: picking up clothes, loading a washing machine, folding garments, and even handling basic household duties like serving drinks.
The trade‑off is speed. In demos, the Onero H1 took about two minutes per garment, far slower than a human but potentially acceptable for a robot working unattended. Its wheeled design favors stability and cost over stair‑climbing, making it best suited for single‑floor homes. Multiple Intel RealSense depth cameras and SwitchBot’s OmniSense VLA AI power object recognition and manipulation, with optional hand configurations balancing dexterity and price.
It’s not mass‑market yet—but it’s one of the first household robots that feels genuinely real.
Price: Under $10,000
Availability: Late 2026
Segway Myon E-Bike

If you want an e‑bike that feels like an extension of your own pedaling—not a throttle pretending to be exercise—the Segway Myon is built for that balance. Designed as a premium, connected commuter, Myon pairs confident power with refined control through TurboTuned™ Algorithm 2.0, which adjusts assistance naturally based on rider input and terrain.
A 500W rear hub motor delivers 85Nm of torque, enabling smooth acceleration up hills up to a 12% grade, while the 722Wh battery supports up to 80 miles of range and speeds up to 28 mph. Segway adds polish where it matters: electronic shifting removes guesswork, hydraulic disc brakes improve stopping confidence, and an 80mm front suspension fork smooths rough pavement. Smart touches like AirLock™, Apple Find My, intelligent lighting, OTA updates, and a 2.4‑inch TFT display complete a well‑rounded package.
It’s a commuter e‑bike that feels deliberate—not overbuilt.
Price: $1,999.99
Availability: Sometime in 2026
Audeze Maxwell 2 Gaming Headset

Gaming headsets rarely get better without trade‑offs—but Audeze’s Maxwell 2 manages to raise the bar across the board. Building on the original Maxwell’s reputation, this update focuses on what matters most: sound quality, comfort, and endurance. At the center are massive 90mm planar magnetic drivers, delivering deeper bass, sharper positional cues, and wider spatial immersion than typical dynamic‑driver gaming headsets.
Audeze’s patent‑pending SLAM™ technology enhances low‑end impact without muddying detail, while ultra‑low‑latency wireless supports 24‑bit/96kHz audio for lag‑free competitive play. Battery life remains a standout at 80+ hours, with a 20‑minute fast charge providing up to 24 hours of use. On the mic side, FILTER™ AI noise removal and high‑bandwidth processing ensure clear, natural voice for chat and streaming.
It’s refinement, not reinvention—and that’s exactly why it wins.
Price: $329
Availability: In stock now
Withings Body Scan 2

Forget smart scales that only tell you what you weigh. Withings’ Body Scan 2 is built to tell you where your health is heading. In just 90 seconds, it analyzes 60+ biomarkers to surface early signals tied to metabolism, cardiovascular health, and long‑term resilience—well before symptoms appear.
Using advanced multi‑point bioimpedance spectroscopy, Body Scan 2 measures at the cellular level, assessing cellular age, visceral fat, and metabolic efficiency rather than relying on estimates. A new 6‑zone breakdown of muscle and fat, early glycemic impact detection, and pre‑diabetes insights give deeper metabolic visibility. On the heart side, it delivers Heart Age, vascular elasticity analysis, hypertension notifications, and atrial fibrillation detection, with signals analyzed in real time.
All of this feeds Health Trajectory, a predictive model that visualizes how daily habits affect healthspan—making prevention feel actionable, not abstract.
Price: $600
Availability: Q2 2026
Govee Ceiling Light Ultra

Most ceiling lights are meant to disappear. Govee’s Ceiling Light Ultra is designed to be seen. At its core is an industry‑leading 616‑pixel LED matrix, turning a standard ceiling fixture into a creative canvas capable of vivid patterns, animations, and expressive ambient scenes.
Govee’s AI Lighting Bot 2.0 dynamically generates effects that adapt in real time, while enhanced DIY lighting tools let users design and fine‑tune their own visuals. Beyond the spectacle, the Ultra is built for everyday use, delivering bright, even illumination suitable for larger family spaces. Importantly, it maintains a natural, true‑to‑life appearance across skin tones and objects, avoiding the harsh or artificial look common to RGB ceiling lights.
It’s a rare smart light that balances creativity with practical, livable lighting—without forcing you to choose between the two.
Price: TBD
Availability: TBD
GoveeLife Nugget Smart Ice Maker

Waiting half an hour for ice feels archaic in 2026. GoveeLife’s Nugget Smart Ice Maker is built for people who actually use ice all day, whether that’s for daily drinks or hosting. It produces chewable nugget ice in just six minutes and can deliver up to 60 pounds per day, fast enough to keep up with parties without falling behind.
Despite the output, it stays impressively quiet at around 40 dB, thanks to AI NoiseGuard that suppresses abnormal sounds. Smart features do real work here: app control, ice‑production history, timed scheduling, and Alexa and Google Assistant support all reduce hands‑on effort. Two self‑cleaning modes—quick and deep—plus app reminders help maintain performance over time. Dual 2.2L and 4.9L water tanks minimize refills during heavy use.
It’s powerful, polished, and clearly designed for real households.
Price: $499.99
Availability: Available on 1/14/2026
Clicks Power Keyboard

Phone keyboards usually make one compromise: better typing at the cost of battery anxiety. Clicks’ Power Keyboard is designed to avoid that trade‑off entirely. This upgraded version adds a built‑in 2,150mAh battery dedicated to the keyboard itself, so typing no longer drains your phone.
More importantly, it gives power back. The Power Keyboard supports 5W Qi wireless charging, letting it top up your phone while in use—turning a keyboard case into a practical power accessory. Typing comfort is improved with a backlit physical keyboard featuring adjustable LED brightness, while Bluetooth LE 5.4 keeps power consumption low. Despite the added hardware, it remains compact at 180 grams, with a patent‑pending design that balances portability and function.
For mobile writers and power users, it’s a smart evolution that finally treats power as part of the typing experience.
Price: $79 (pre‑order)
Availability: Pre‑orders open now
Narwal U50 Mattress Vacuum

You don’t see what’s living in your mattress—but your body definitely feels it. Narwal’s U50 Mattress Vacuum is built specifically to deal with what settles into your bed over time, targeting dust mites, skin cells, oils, and allergens that traditional vacuums often miss.
Unlike standard handheld cleaners, the U50 combines 16,000 Pa of suction with high‑speed tapping to dislodge deeply embedded debris. It then adds a one‑two punch of 137‑degree heat and UV sterilization, designed to neutralize mites before they’re captured. Once collected, debris is sealed inside a self‑closing dust bag, keeping allergens contained until disposal.
While it’s a handheld device rather than an autonomous crawler, the U50’s focused design makes it far more effective than general‑purpose vacuums for mattress care. For anyone serious about sleep hygiene, it tackles a problem most people prefer not to think about—but should.
Price: TBD
Availability: Spring 2026
BMX Solid State Air Power Bank

Thin power banks usually come with compromises. BMX’s SolidSafe Air series flips that expectation by making safety the reason it’s so slim. Measuring just 6.8 mm thick, these iPhone‑focused power banks use semi‑solid‑state battery chemistry instead of traditional liquid electrolytes, significantly reducing the risk of swelling or ignition.
That safer chemistry enables a design that feels closer to a phone accessory than a battery brick. Each unit packs 5,000 mAh of capacity, supports Qi2 wireless charging, and is wrapped in a titanium‑copper alloy casing that adds rigidity without bulk. Compared to conventional magnetic power banks, SolidSafe Air prioritizes structural integrity and thermal stability as much as aesthetics.
It’s not about maximum capacity—it’s about confidence, portability, and modern battery design done right.
Price: TBD
Availability: Q1 2026
Lymow One Plus Lawnmower

Steep slopes and thick grass are where most robot mowers quietly give up. The Lymow One Plus is engineered specifically for the lawns that break everything else. Using a heavy‑duty track drive system, it can handle 100% (45°) slopes and roll confidently over roots, branches, gravel, and uneven terrain where wheeled robots struggle.
Cutting power comes from the Lycut System 2.0, pairing dual rotary blades spinning up to 6,000 RPM with SK5 tool‑steel construction for clean cuts through tall, dense grass. A 16‑inch cutting deck and cyclone airflow‑lift design ensure no missed blades, while fine mulching handles both grass and fallen leaves. With coverage of up to 1.73 acres per day, wire‑free navigation, and smart path planning across 80+ zones, it’s built for large, complex yards. A 2,000‑cycle LiFePO4 battery and fast charging round out a system designed for years—not seasons.
Price: TBD
Availability: Sometime in 2026
Dnsys Z1 Knee Exoskeleton

Your knees absorb far more punishment than most people realize—and the Dnsys Z1 is designed to give them real backup. This ultra‑light AI‑powered knee exoskeleton delivers up to 50% intelligent leg assistance, reducing effective load by as much as 77 pounds and helping users walk farther, climb higher, and descend more safely.
Weighing just 1.5 pounds, the Z1 uses a self‑developed DNA‑1 motor and a dense sensor array to detect movement, load, and terrain in real time, activating assistance within 0.01 seconds. It provides up to 44 pounds of upward support during demanding motions like climbing, standing, or carrying heavy packs, while downhill modes reduce knee stress during descents. AI gait learning adapts support over time, improving stability across trails, stairs, slopes, and everyday movement.
It’s ambitious, technically impressive, and aimed squarely at extending what human legs can comfortably do.
Price: TBD
Availability: TBD
ECHO Flask Hydrogen Water Bottle

Hydration gadgets tend to promise miracles. The ECHO Flask takes a more technical route—focusing on measurable hydrogen delivery rather than vague wellness claims. Using an advanced proton exchange membrane with platinum and titanium plating, it infuses ordinary water with up to 8 ppm of molecular hydrogen, generated in controlled 10‑ or 20‑minute cycles.
The 12‑ounce flask is built for daily use, with a BPA‑free, shatter‑proof casing, pressure‑regulated operation up to 60 PSI, and an oxygen release port for safe hydrogen venting. A touchscreen LCD with dark and light modes shows cycle status, while Bluetooth app tracking adds usage insights. Each charge supports up to seven cycles via USB‑C. Importantly, it avoids altering pH or introducing contaminants—no heavy metals, PFAs, or chlorine.
It’s not a cure‑all—but for hydrogen‑curious users, it’s one of the most fully realized implementations yet.
Price: $299.99
Availability: Available now
ZenoWell Vagus Nerve Stimulation Device

Stress tech usually asks you to meditate harder. ZenoWell takes a different approach by directly engaging the nervous system itself. This wearable neurotech uses transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS), delivering precise stimulation through the ear—the only place where the vagus nerve is accessible at the body’s surface.
By activating parasympathetic response, ZenoWell is designed to deepen sleep, reduce stress, and accelerate recovery, helping restore balance across the gut‑brain‑body axis. The system targets autonomic regulation, with benefits aimed at improving HRV, lowering resting heart rate, and supporting long‑term resilience rather than short‑term relaxation alone. Sessions are intended to deliver noticeable calming effects within minutes, making it usable both acutely and as part of a daily wellness routine.
It’s not positioned as a medical device—but as a thoughtfully engineered way to work with your nervous system, not around it.
Price: $279 to $350
Availability: Available now
Falcon T1 Laser Engraver

Laser engravers are getting faster—but the Falcon T1 signals Creality’s push toward precision as much as speed. While full specifications remain under wraps, the T1 is expected to build on the Falcon series’ momentum with high‑speed engraving that likely meets or exceeds 10,000 mm/min, paired with an ultra‑fine laser spot designed for detailed, high‑resolution work.
That combination positions the T1 as more than a hobby tool, aiming squarely at makers and small businesses that care about clean lines as much as throughput. Software support should feel familiar, with anticipated compatibility for LightBurn, LaserGRBL, and Creality’s own Falcon Design Space, lowering friction for existing users.
Unveiled at IFA, the Falcon T1 underscores Creality’s expansion beyond 3D printing into broader digital fabrication—where reliability, speed, and ecosystem matter just as much as raw specs.
Price: TBD
Availability: TBD
OPSODIS 1 Speaker

OPSODIS 1 tackles a familiar problem: soundbars and desktop speakers rarely deliver real surround sound. They push everything forward, leaving movies, games, and concerts sounding flat unless you invest in multi‑speaker setups that clutter a room and cost a fortune.
Kajima Corporation’s OPSODIS 1 takes a different shot at immersion. Using OPSODIS 3D audio tech co‑developed with the University of Southampton, it independently controls what reaches each ear—recreating spatial detail without rear speakers, headphones, or wall reflections. Explosions feel like they wrap the room, footsteps gain direction, and live recordings breathe like venues rather than stereo tracks.
After breaking crowdfunding records in Japan, the OPSODIS 1 heads global.
Price: $720 for early backers/$1200 retail
Availability: February 2026




























