NVIDIA maps broader RTX Spark rollout

NVIDIA says it has secured enough supply of the 3 nm N1X silicon from TSMC to support RTX Spark growth in PCs. The company is positioning the platform for mainstream and performance systems while already planning follow-on generations.

NVIDIA said at Computex 2026 that it has secured enough supply of the 3 nm N1X silicon from TSMC to ensure robust growth of the RTX Spark processor in the PC industry. The company is framing RTX Spark as a broad PC play rather than a niche offering, with a strategy aimed at expanding its presence across the market.

RTX Spark is being positioned beyond power users and Artificial Intelligence developers, a segment NVIDIA said is served by the purpose-built DGX Spark. Instead, NVIDIA wants to compete across all mainstream and performance segments of the PC market. The company said RTX Spark will be differentiated in many product models ranging from the entry-level to the top-spec part shown at Computex.

NVIDIA also said it is already working on the 2nd- and 3rd generations of the silicon behind RTX Spark, named N2X and N3X. These future chips are expected to use future process nodes and future microarchitectures. NVIDIA indicated these could be the reported ‘Vera’ CPU and ‘Rubin’ graphics/compute, followed by the future ‘Feynman’ graphics/compute.

The company described its PC push as a long-term effort rather than an experimental expansion. It took over 3 years of sustained co-development with Microsoft for NVIDIA to enter the PC market, and NVIDIA signaled that it intends to remain a committed player in the category.

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