Just hours before the official launch event, a new retailer leak discloses three planned model variations and prices in addition to a new Lenovo Yoga Pro 7 laptop based on Nvidia’s ARM APU. Lenovo may be the first company to enter the new PC age that Nvidia announced. A pricing war with the Snapdragon X2 Elite is not necessarily indicated by the latter.
A new 15.3-inch model with an ARM APU made by Nvidia and MediaTek is in the horizon, according to a fresh retailer leak found by WinFuture. The Yoga Pro 7 was previously available with an Intel CPU and an AMD variation. This also confirms that when Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang opens this year’s Computex early on June 1, 2026, he will discuss more than just AI.
Over the past few hours, numerous teasers from Nvidia, Microsoft, MediaTek, and ARM have promised nothing less than a new era for the PC.A 15.3-inch Lenovo Yoga Pro 7 workstation with a 165Hz WQXGA OLED touchscreen, up to 64GB RAM, a 1TB PCIe SSD, and Windows 11 Home is described in each of the shop leaks, which originate from Eastern Europe. Naturally, the reference to two or even three Nvidia N1(X) models is the most intriguing element. Based on an Nvidia N1X 675, the most likely top configuration costs €4,049 and comes with 64GB of RAM. With an Nvidia N1X 650 APU and 32GB RAM, a somewhat less expensive model costs €3,199.
For another Yoga Pro 7 model with an Nvidia N1 chip, we do not have a screenshot or pricing. Thus, it seems that there will be a minimum of three Nvidia N1(X) SKUs, which will probably vary mainly in their attainable clock rates. It’s still unknown if the Nvidia N1 will have fewer features than the N1X. The ARM CPU, which was created in collaboration with MediaTek and produced by TSMC using its 3nm process, has 20 ARM v9.2 cores and a Blackwell GPU with 6,144 CUDA cores and 48 SM units, according to previous leaks.Lenovo is not alone, with other brands like Asus also expected to release their first Nvidia N1X-based laptops next week. Microsoft’s Surface division might also have news at launch.
