Having conquered data centers and dominated the AI processor market, Nvidia is preparing to return to the place where it all began: the PC. The Wall Street Journal reports that the American tech giant is set to launch this year its first chips dedicated to laptops, in partnership with Intel and MediaTek. Dell, Lenovo, and other manufacturers are already working on models powered by these new architectures.
A Strategic Foray, More Than a Financial Gamble
For Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s founder and chief executive, the ambition extends far beyond simply releasing a new generation of processors. It is about embedding Nvidia at the heart of the “PC of tomorrow,” an apparatus that’s slimmer, more responsive, and above all inherently infused with artificial intelligence.
The new chips, designed along the system-on-a-chip (SoC) model — combining CPU and GPU in a single component — promise both power and energy efficiency, much like Apple’s MacBooks.
Nvidia does not anticipate quick profits. But for the world leader in GPUs, weighing in on the next generation of smart PCs has become strategic: “Every device will soon be AI-driven,” analysts note. By re-entering the consumer segment, Nvidia maintains a practical usage and branding link, complementary to its industrial hegemony.
Intel, MediaTek… and the Return of Arm Architectures
The plan rests on two major partnerships. With Intel, Nvidia will fuse its graphics and AI technologies with the American giant’s processors, which still account for about 70% of the Windows PC chip market. In parallel, a tie-up with Taiwan’s MediaTek, built around the Arm architecture, targets lighter and more efficient computers that Dell and Lenovo are expected to launch in the first half of 2026.
The bet is bold: expanding the use of the Arm model in a realm historically dominated by the x86 architectures of Intel and AMD. If the transition succeeds, the AI-native PC could become the new standard, giving a fresh lease on life to a market hungry for innovation.
A Bet on Gamers and Performance
Nvidia has not forgotten its loyal followers: gamers. They too constitute a key target of this revival, as the brand enjoys in this community an almost cult-like status. The challenge remains to overcome the technical limitations of the Arm architecture, which showed weaknesses for Windows gaming during early Qualcomm chip trials. To persuade the market, Nvidia will need to guarantee compatibility and performance while keeping costs under control.
According to Jason Tsai of Digitimes, the price should stay between $1,000 and $1,500. “Beyond that, the product risks becoming technological luxury rather than democratization,” warns the analyst.