NVIDIA's N1X Arm Chip For Consumers Spotted In Dell Laptop But Is A Launch Imminent?

by · HotHardware

Enthusiast sleuth Gray (@Olrak29_ on Xwitter) has been digging into the shipping logs again, and this time the rabbit hole leads straight into NVIDIA's long-rumored Arm ambitions for consumer PCs. This time around, he spotted a particularly telling entry in NBD Data shipping records, where buried in the usual logistics soup was this rather unsubtle line item:

NBD Data leak spotted by Gray (@Olrak29_ on X)

That's a lot of capital letters to say that Dell has engineering samples of a 16-inch "Premium" laptop with an OLED like the one we reviewed, but instead running NVIDIA's N1X processor. The "ES2" tag suggests second-generation engineering silicon, and "DVT"—standing for Design Validation Test—is the important bit. In laptop development, DVT is essentially a release candidate phase, not a napkin sketch.

The shipment date was November 20, 2025, which is likely why the log says "Premium" and not "XPS." As of today, January 13, 2026, that puts the hardware at just under two months old. In normal circumstances, this is about where products start heading toward retail shelves. We're not so sure that's necessarily in the cards, though.

The N1X SoC itself is not a mystery; it's an Arm-based system-on-chip with Blackwell graphics, confirmed by Jensen Huang himself to be based on the same "GB10 Superchip" design NVIDIA uses in its pint-sized DGX Spark AI development desktop. Assuming the N1X ends up with the same configuration as the GB10 used in the DGX Spark, it's a two-chiplet SoC: one Blackwell GPU chiplet paired with a Mediatek-designed CPU + I/O chiplet, linked up to each other by a very fast silicon bridge interconnect to hit an eye-watering 600 GB/sec of bandwidth.

NVIDIA GB10 die shot, clearly showing 48 SMs and 10+10 CPU cores. (Image: NVIDIA)

On paper, then, that gets you 20 Arm CPU cores and 48 Blackwell SMs. In raw GPU terms, that's in the neighborhood of a GeForce RTX 5070, but there's a catch, of course; instead of speedy GDDR7 as on the desktop GPU, GB10 relies on shared 256-bit LPDDR5X. The memory pool is fully unified, and very AI-friendly, but not exactly what PC gamers expect when they see "RTX-class" numbers.

Earlier rumors pegged consumer N1X systems for Q1 2026, which lines up well with a Dell DVT unit shipping in late November. From a purely logistical standpoint, Dell could plausibly be readying an N1X-based laptop for sale right about now. The elephant in the room is memory, or rather, the ongoing DRAM shortage that has turned DIMM pricing into surrealist performance art. Retail memory prices have spiked to as much as 10× their original list levels, and the effects aren't limited to GPUs or PCs. Everything from dishwashers to datacenter accelerators is competing for the same supply. A niche unified-memory gaming-first SoC with a 256-bit LPDDR5X memory interface is exactly the kind of product that feels that pain first.

Dell's new XPS laptops, shown at CES 2026. The machine could look like these.

Then there's MediaTek. Industry scuttlebutt says that NVIDIA's design partner for N1X is making a company-wide pivot toward datacenter and AI products, explicitly de-emphasizing phone SoCs. GB10 fits that narrative perfectly; a consumer-branded "N1X" gaming laptop somewhat less so. Layer on top of that the whispers that the original 2025 plan slipped to 2026 due to "delays in Microsoft's operating system roadmap," and the picture starts to wobble. Arm-based Windows machines are improving, but the ecosystem is still heavily reliant on emulation, and simply not compatible with many of the games casual gamers want to play.

Even if N1X does make it to retail, the value proposition looks awkward. DGX Spark using essentially the same silicon sells for around $4,000, but we can argue that that's a professional product squarely aimed at developers and AI workloads. In the client space, around half the cash buys you systems based on AMD's frankly rather similar Ryzen AI Max (Strix Halo).

NVIDIA's DGX Spark uses the same silicon as N1X. From our review.

While those are very cool, extremely few of the designs implementing Strix Halo are being targeted directly at gamers, as the performance really isn't outstanding compared to similarly-priced discrete GPU solutions. Then, on the CPU side, the Cortex-X925 cores NVIDIA is using don't clearly outmuscle the latest offerings from AMD or Intel, and especially not in a mobile SoC with a limited power budget. Add the cost of a high-speed chiplet interconnect, premium LPDDR5X, and an unavoidably expensive manufacturing process, and N1X starts to look less like a disruptor and more like an engineering flex looking for a market.

All of which leaves us here: an intriguing Dell engineering sample, explicit confirmation that N1X hardware exists and works, and a long list of reasons why it might never escape the lab in consumer form. NVIDIA's GB10 is genuinely fascinating technology, and as a developer platform or AI-focused device, it makes a lot of sense. As a mainstream client product in the N1X, especially one expected to compete with x86-64 SoCs on price, performance, and game compatibility, it has nearly everything stacked against it.