NVIDIA is reportedly developing its own ARM-based processor targeted at the gaming laptop market, with a potential debut in Alienware devices as early as late 2025 or early 2026. Information from Taiwan´s United Daily News suggests that this new hybrid chip, or accelerated processing unit (APU), will integrate an ARM-based CPU and a Blackwell-architecture GPU. MediaTek is partnering on the development, with expected thermal design powers ranging from 80 to 120 watts, which aligns with premium gaming laptops.
This move marks a significant step for NVIDIA, which currently supplies GPUs for laptops powered by Intel and AMD chips but lacks a proprietary CPU platform in the gaming sector. By introducing an ARM-based chip, NVIDIA could improve the gaming experience on Windows for ARM devices, an area where current solutions like Qualcomm´s Snapdragon X processors fall short, often requiring emulation via Prism and struggling with game compatibility. The goal appears to be seamless gaming performance and enhanced Artificial Intelligence capabilities on ARM Windows laptops, potentially leapfrogging current limitations.
NVIDIA´s ARM processor ambitions were first reported in 2023, and the company´s CEO Jensen Huang subsequently confirmed that the chip would appear in the upcoming Digits Artificial Intelligence computer. Dell CEO Michael Dell has also hinted at collaboration with NVIDIA for Artificial Intelligence PC initiatives, further fueling speculation about Alienware as a launch partner. The competitive landscape in the ARM segment is heating up, as MediaTek prepares its own chips and AMD is rumored to be readying an ARM processor for Microsoft´s Surface line, signaling an industry-wide push to break the Intel-AMD duopoly and establish ARM as a serious contender for performance laptops.