MWC 2026: Goodbye Boring Phones, Hello Extreme Foldables and Robots That Follow You Home
Last week, Barcelona was once again the capital of the tech universe. And no, I'm not talking about the Mountain West Conference basketball tournament, which has its own charm, but we're at the Mobile World Congress. For those who arrived searching for Moco (maybe a voice dictation slip-up), there are no seasonal viruses here, but rather a vaccine against tech boredom. MWC 2026 has closed its doors leaving one clear feeling: innovation has stopped being incremental and has become radical.
I've been covering this fair since the days of MWC22, back when we were still dealing with restrictions and masks. That was a transition event, full of promises. But this year, it was all about action. Walking through the halls at Gran Via was like peeking into a shop window from 2030. And not just because of the phones, which are plenty and pretty wild, but because of the way brands are redefining what a "mobile device" actually means.
From book-style foldables to consoles that bend
You'd have to be blind not to see it: the foldable format is no longer a rarity; it's become the main battleground. If a few years ago everyone was copying Samsung's clamshell design, now the war is about who dares to go further. And Lenovo has taken the prize for the riskiest move. Their new foldable gaming handheld concept is absolutely mental: a portable console that, when you unfold it, turns into a nearly 9-inch screen without increasing the pocket size. Kids who grew up with a Game Boy are blown away, and so am I.
- Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Fold (Gen 3): The beast of productivity foldables. A 16-inch OLED screen that folds into a book-like format. Perfect for carrying your office with you without sacrificing that geek chic style.
- Honor Magic V3: Thinner, lighter, faster. Honor has figured out that design matters, but so does durability. This year they've integrated a liquid titanium hinge that promises to outlast many a modern relationship.
- Xiaomi Mix Fold 4: The Chinese bet on an under-display camera on the inner screen. Yeah, you can still kind of see a ghost of the pixels, but for video calls, it's incredibly smooth.
When your phone follows you around like a puppy
But the crown jewel, the thing that really got people talking on the Port Vell terraces, was the prototype from Honor that some are already calling the robot phone. It's not a new concept, but the execution is mind-blowing. Imagine a phone with a small robotic module attached (or integrated) that lets it move around on a table, follow you with its camera as you walk, or even physically interact with small objects. Internally, they call it the "AI Companion," but on the show floor, the nickname Moco was doing the rounds, because it's so clingy. And look, it's not a toy: the autonomous movement processing capability opens the door to medical uses (bringing the phone to a bedridden patient) or security (having the phone film you from another angle while you're talking).
This brings us to the real core of MWC 2026: artificial intelligence has stopped being an app and has become the operating system. Phones no longer wait for you to give them orders; they watch you, learn from you, and take action. Assistants that negotiate appointments for you, real-time generative photo editing (without going through the cloud), and simultaneous translations that barely use any battery. The Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 and the new MediaTek Dimensity 9400 are built for this, for running massive language models directly on the chip.
So, how does this affect us in Ireland?
As an analyst living and working here, I always wonder what slice of this pie we get. And the answer is: a decent one, if we play our cards right. Barcelona isn't just the host; it's a hub for deep tech startups. This year I saw more American and Asian investors at 4YFN (the parallel event for entrepreneurs) than ever before. They're looking for talent in computer vision, soft robotics, and embedded software. Operators like Virgin Media or Three here have a goldmine: edge computing combined with these autonomous devices demands ultra-fast, low-latency networks. 5G is no longer enough; there's open talk about trialling 6G in controlled environments by 2028.
It's also time for local developers to get on board. Designing experiences for a screen that folds or a device that moves on its own requires a whole new grammar. Flat apps are dead. What's coming is spatial and tangible computing. And believe me, it's not science fiction; I touched it at the Xiaomi stand and saw it running on Android.
My bet for next year
If MWC22 was the comeback, and is the consolidation of foldable and robotic madness, next year will be the definitive disappearance of the physical port. I saw prototypes of long-distance ultrasonic charging and data transfers at 100 Gbps using infrared light. When that hits the mainstream, we'll be wondering why we put up with cables for so long.
Lastly, a note for the confused: if you were looking for results from the Mountain West Conference basketball, sorry, we're only talking tech here. But if your thing is seeing how a phone can become your best mate (or your go-to console), the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona has once again proven that the future, even when it seems a bit mad, is already here. And it comes with a foldable screen and wheels.