The Weird, the Creative, and the Unexpected
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CES wouldn’t be CES without its surprises. Clicks Technology stole attention with its Clicks Communicator, a $499 smartphone bringing back BlackBerry-style physical keyboards. Meanwhile, Lego made its first-ever CES appearance, unveiling Smart Bricks that interact digitally, launching with Star Wars-themed sets.
Other standouts included the eufyMake E1 UV printer, aimed at Etsy creators, the Skylight Calendar 2 with AI-powered family planning features, and Razer’s experimental Project AVA and Project Motoko. Together, these products showed that even in an AI-heavy year, CES still thrives on bold ideas, oddities, and early glimpses of what consumer tech could become next.