NVIDIA is preparing to launch its inaugural Arm-based gaming system-on-chip (SoC), codenamed ´N1/N1x´, in partnership with MediaTek for Dell´s Alienware laptops. Taiwanese sources report the hardware will debut either later this year or in early 2026. Fusing an Arm-derived CPU with NVIDIA´s new Blackwell GPU architecture, this SoC promises significant computational power, positioned with an operational envelope of 80 to 120 watts—comparable to today’s highest-performing mobile chips.
The competitive landscape for Arm-based PCs has been turbulent. Qualcomm´s previous Snapdragon X-series encountered hurdles largely due to the need for software emulation via Microsoft´s Prism framework, causing compatibility issues and degraded gaming performance. In contrast, NVIDIA intends to circumvent these obstacles by collaborating directly with both Microsoft and game developers. Their strategy is to deliver native Arm compatibility for major titles from the outset, benefiting the broader Arm hardware ecosystem and sidestepping the compatibility woes that plagued earlier Arm-based solutions for Windows laptops.
Speculation surrounding an Arm-focused gaming chip from NVIDIA began in 2023, and recent leaks point to engineering prototypes already in existence. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang disclosed during an earnings call that Arm cores would soon be incorporated into Artificial Intelligence-oriented hardware systems, specifically referencing the Digits compute platform. Dell’s CEO Michael Dell also stirred anticipation by hinting at an upcoming Artificial Intelligence-first PC powered by NVIDIA’s own technology, with Alienware widely tipped as its launch device. Beyond just gaming laptops, the NVIDIA-MediaTek alliance could preface a suite of Arm-driven products spanning desktops and mobile devices. MediaTek is said to be nursing its proprietary Arm processor for PCs, and AMD is also developing Arm-based solutions for future Surface models from Microsoft. NVIDIA’s initiative may accelerate the shift toward Arm in performance computing, transforming Alienware laptops into a proving ground for high-powered, x86-alternative platforms.