NVIDIA's upcoming N1 and N1X chips have been the subject of speculation for quite some time now, and we are getting closer and closer to a full reveal. The N1X, in particular, is expected to be NVIDIA's flagship Arm-based SoC for Windows laptops, combining Arm CPU cores with a Blackwell-generation integrated GPU. The standard N1 is a more affordable, cut-down version of the same chip.
Recently, NVIDIA and Microsoft both posted identical "new era of PC" teasers on their social media channels, with Arm following suit shortly after. The coordinated campaign all but confirmed that a major Windows on Arm announcement was imminent. The official reveal is expected on June 1 at Computex 2026, where NVIDIA is widely anticipated to take the wraps off the N1 family in full.
Now, retailer listings spotted by German tech outlet WinFuture have revealed that the Lenovo Yoga Pro 7 is being prepared in two N1X-based configurations: one with a chip called the N1X 650, and another with the N1X 675. The two variants are thought to differ primarily in clock speeds rather than core configuration. It is worth noting that the standard N1 will also reportedly feature in a lower-priced Yoga Pro 7 variant, sitting below the N1X models in the lineup.
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According to the listings, the Yoga Pro 7 N1X models will ship with a 15.3-inch WQXGA OLED display running at up to 165Hz, 32GB or 64GB of DDR5 memory, a 1TB PCIe SSD, and Windows 11 Home out of the box. Pricing is listed at around 3,100 euros for the N1X 650 variant and up to 4,000 euros for the N1X 675.
Based on a prior leak from Videocardz, the top N1X configuration packs a 20-core CPU with 10 Cortex-X925 performance cores and 10 Cortex-A725 efficiency cores, paired with a Blackwell 2.0 GPU featuring 48 SPs and 6,144 CUDA cores. That GPU core count matches the desktop RTX 5070. A slightly cut-down N1X variant with 18 cores and 5,120 CUDA cores is also reportedly planned, and both share a configurable TDP range of 45W to 80W.

Buyers should keep in mind that, much like with Qualcomm Snapdragon X-based laptops, traditional x86 Windows applications will require emulation on these machines, and gaming compatibility is expected to be limited. Of course, we will have to wait for the official announcement and independent reviews before drawing any firm conclusions.
It seems like NVIDIA's Arm-based push is quite real, so stay tuned to our Computex Taipei coverage for more details.










