Mobile World Congress in Barcelona is where the tech world’s biggest companies get together to show off their latest gadgets. At MWC 2026 we’ve seen some amazing products, including the Leica Leitzphone by Xiaomi and the super skinny Honor Magic V6 foldable phone. But the show always provides a wealth of quirky concept devices and
Mobile World Congress in Barcelona is where the tech world’s biggest companies get together to show off their latest gadgets. At MWC 2026 we’ve seen some amazing products, including the Leica Leitzphone by Xiaomi and the super skinny Honor Magic V6 foldable phone. But the show always provides a wealth of quirky concept devices and this year is no exception.
From wild cars to transforming phones, these are the most exciting concepts we’ve seen on the MWC show floor so far.
The Vision GT looks amazing but I don’t think I’ll ever get to drive one.
Xiaomi Vision GT
Xiaomi is no stranger to EVs, but this is the first time the company has designed a hypercar specifically to be used as a digital asset in the PlayStation 5 racing game Gran Turismo. But Xiaomi didn’t stop there — it actually built the car for real and gave it pride of place on its enormous booth at the conference center.
The Vision GT, as it’s called (GT stands for Gran Turismo, obvs) is an all-electric hypercar that Xiaomi says is “sculpted by wind.” By which it means, it’s designed with all kinds of swooping lines and flowing inlets that allow it to pass through the air with minimal resistance. It’s got an enormous rear… umm…section? Whatever it is, it’s basically one massive hole to allow for airflow.
The car looks incredible and I’d love to have been able to sit inside the LED-strewn cockpit but sadly the doors remained firmly closed. This is a concept model designed for the game, and the company has made no statement on whether it ever plans to put something like this into production.
One thing’s for sure though: It sure as hell won’t come cheap.
This modular really “lens” itself to photography
Tecno modular camera phone
I may have been bowled over this year by Xiaomi and Leica’s incredible camera powerhouse of a phone but Tecno’s concept may even be able to take things further. At its heart is essentially a skinny Android phone but the series of electric contact pins on the back allow you to slap on a variety of modular accessories to completely change what the phone can do.
One module that particularly caught my eye was a camera unit, that added not just a whopping great zoom lens to the phone, but actually had its own larger camera sensor too. It basically turned the phone into a fully fledged camera that just used the display as the viewfinder.
Hopefully that larger image sensor would also allow the phone to take some pretty awesome photos, though I’ll have to reserve judgement on what its images look like for at such point Tecno puts it into production.
The robot peeks out of the back of the Honor phone.
Honor Robot phone
Honor first showed off its concept Robot Phone back at CES in Las Vegas but we’ve been able to get much closer up with the thing this year. It looks sort of like the love child of an Android phone and a DJI Osmo Pocket 3, with a gimbal-stabilized camera unit folding out from inside the phone.
As a YouTuber myself, I love the idea of having a compact way to shoot my photography videos. Honor has actually had to develop its own tiny motors — based on the technology it uses in the hinges for its folding phones — and CNET’s own Katie Collins was impressed when the camera’s built-in AI complimented her “soft and shiny hair.”
While the robot phone is still in the concept stage right now, Honor has said that it will go into full production and we may even be able to buy it in the second half of the year.
We got hands-on experience with the Yoga Book 3D concept — this picture of a mouse turned into a fully rendered 3D model before our very eyes.
Lenovo Yoga Book 3D concept
Lenovo and sister brand Motorola have frequently shown off some fun concepts at the show, my favorite being Motorola’s wrist-worn phone from 2024. This year Lenovo is leading the way with its concept Yoga Book 3D laptop display, which shows images in 3D — and you don’t even need to wear those stupid glasses to see it.
Like any tech item launched recently, the device leans on AI to achieve its goals. In this case, the AI goes to work in helping transform 2D drawn objects into full 3D renderings. It has two displays, with the bottom display being your “working screen” where you’ll draw and interact with your creations while the top one uses stereoscopic screen technology to render your images in a way that makes them look actually three dimensional.
We tested it at a hands-on event ahead of the show and CNET’s Tyler Graham remarked that “if you aren’t standing directly in front of the computer, the projection feels less impressive and more headache-inducing.” This has been my experience using any glasses-free 3D technology so I don’t see this kind of tech being deployed in a mass-market product just yet. But it’s nice to see it being experimented with.
Honor CEO James Li greets the company’s robot on stage at MWC
Honor Humanoid robot
Did you think Honor was done with robots after the aforementioned Robot Phone? Oh no, the company has much bigger plans with robotics and laid its cards out clearly on the table at this year’s show. Its first humanoid robot took to the stage during the company’s press conference, dancing, moonwalking and even backflipping to show off how easily it can move around versus, say, a 38-year-old tech journalist whose knees struggle with standing up, let alone backflipping.
The robot will be packed with AI smarts, of course, and rather than focusing on industrial applications, Honor is aiming its robot firmly towards the consumer world. It says it’ll be able to help us in the workplace, as a humanoid companion in the home and for assisting with shopping. Though if I hear one word from it about how I maybe don’t need to buy a second pack of biscuits I’m kicking it straight into the sea.















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