- Nvidia N1X 675, 64GB RAM: 4,049 euros
- Nvidia N1X 650, 32GB RAM: 3,199 euros
- Nvidia N1: listed in the retailer database, but no price shown yet
A Blackwell chip in a thin laptop body
According to early data, Nvidia N1 and N1X will be made by TSMC on a 3nm process and combine a 20-core CPU with a Blackwell GPU carrying 6,144 CUDA cores, roughly in GeForce RTX 5070 territory. If that performance shows up in a slim consumer laptop, the premium pricing suddenly looks less like a typo and more like Nvidia testing how much Arm ambition the market will tolerate.
Lenovo will not be alone for long. Asus is expected to show its own N1/N1X-based machines as soon as next week, which suggests Nvidia and MediaTek are lining up a wider Windows on Arm push rather than a one-off showcase. The catch, as ever, is whether buyers see these as the start of something new or just another expensive detour.
Lenovo’s next Yoga Pro 7 looks set to be the price tag that kills the buzz around Nvidia’s much-hyped ”new era of PCs” – at least if a fresh retail leak is accurate. A major Eastern European retailer has exposed a new Arm-based version of the laptop ahead of Computex 2026, and the top configuration lands at 4,049 euros.
That matters because the Yoga Pro 7 line has so far lived in Intel and AMD territory. This version swaps in Nvidia’s new N1/N1X platform, co-developed with MediaTek, and turns the machine into one of the earliest Windows on Arm notebooks aiming squarely at premium buyers rather than early adopters willing to tolerate rough edges.
Yoga Pro 7 specs shown by the retailer
The leak points to a 15.3-inch WQXGA OLED touchscreen with a 165Hz refresh rate, 32GB or 64GB of RAM, a 1TB SSD, and Windows 11 Home. The retailer database also lists several configurations built around Nvidia N1 and N1X, suggesting Lenovo is preparing more than a single halo model.
- Nvidia N1X 675, 64GB RAM: 4,049 euros
- Nvidia N1X 650, 32GB RAM: 3,199 euros
- Nvidia N1: listed in the retailer database, but no price shown yet
A Blackwell chip in a thin laptop body
According to early data, Nvidia N1 and N1X will be made by TSMC on a 3nm process and combine a 20-core CPU with a Blackwell GPU carrying 6,144 CUDA cores, roughly in GeForce RTX 5070 territory. If that performance shows up in a slim consumer laptop, the premium pricing suddenly looks less like a typo and more like Nvidia testing how much Arm ambition the market will tolerate.
Lenovo will not be alone for long. Asus is expected to show its own N1/N1X-based machines as soon as next week, which suggests Nvidia and MediaTek are lining up a wider Windows on Arm push rather than a one-off showcase. The catch, as ever, is whether buyers see these as the start of something new or just another expensive detour.

