More than two years in the past, rumors of consumer-focused ARM SoCs from Nvidia first began to drift, and since then, we have discovered in regards to the existence of N1/N1X solely by means of leaks. Most not too long ago, a delivery manifest that includes an unreleased Dell laptop computer with an N1X chip was noticed, reigniting hope for the platform’s eventual launch. Today, a brand new report from DigiTimes says that N1 is again on Nvidia’s inside roadmap.
“According to supply chain operators, according to NVIDIA’s latest technology blueprint, the Windows on Arm (WoA) platform NB model using N1X will debut in the first quarter of 2026, first targeting the consumer market, and the other three versions will go on sale in the second quarter, and the next-generation N2 series is expected to take over in the third quarter of 2027.” — DigiTimes Taiwan
More interestingly, DigiTimes also mentions that the next-gen N2 series is already under development and planned for Q3 2027. If these timelines are true, it’s strange that even the N1 was a no-show at CES 2026, with just a few months before its purported debut. Still, the rumor lines up with the Dell laptop leak we covered recently; could the XPS lineup be a frontrunner to showcase N1?
“In terms of product schedule, NVIDIA has also released a next-generation plan, using the N2X DGX Spark model, which will debut in the fourth quarter of 2027 at the earliest; The N2 model of the WoA platform will be launched in the third quarter of 2027 at the earliest.” — DigiTimes Taiwan
Despite Panther Lake’s recent impressive showing, the only fully-fledged substitute to discrete graphics on a mobile platform is AMD’s Strix Halo, so far. If the reports are to be believed, that reality could soon be altered with a new competitor.
Apple has shown what the ARM architecture is capable of for consumers, and Qualcomm is trying to repeat that magic with its Snapdragon X lineup. Microsoft’s efforts to popularize Windows-on-ARM, even with proper x64 emulation now baked in, have been underwhelming so far, but all that could change with the N1/N1X.
That being said, given the AI boom, pricing for the platform may not be as enticing as it was once planned. Originally, the N1 was rumored to launch at Computex 2025, but that ship has sailed, and along with it, fair prices for DRAM and NAND flash. Nvidia is also working with Intel in a partnership now worth $5 billion to develop Intel x86 RTX SoCs featuring the Blue Team’s CPUs and the Green Team’s GPUs on the same die.
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