It’s been known for a while that NVIDIA is putting its sights on the PC market more than just being a GPU maker – the chipmaker has already in active collaboration with MediaTek to produce a consumer chip that will be Arm-based to enter the PC market. One such chip is the N1X, and it has been spotted in Geekbench database.
NVIDIA N1X Spotted In The Wild

Looking at this chip’s scores, we can compare it against the best chip AMD and Intel has to offer today – and the N1X is no slouch in this regard. In single-core scores, it edges out AMD’s Ryzen AI Max+ 395, though the N1X outpaces Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 in both metrics, with its superior core counts contributing to the multi-core advantage. In the grand scheme of things though, Apple’s M4 Max continues to reign supreme in this benchmark, with 25% faster single-core and 37% faster multi-core performance.
The Geekbench entry was listed just two days ago running on an unspecified HP machine with Ubuntu operating system, and there are some specs revealed through this benchmark. First of all, the CPU information indicates that this is a 20-core processor (the system erroneously reported 1 core, 20 threads instead), and the system RAM is approximately 120GB in total.
This would align with another chip NVIDIA released not too long ago for DGX Spark: the Grace Blackwell GB10 Superchip. We know GB10 comes in two clusters of 10-core processors, with the first being Arm Cortex-X925 and the second being Arm Cortex-A725. The former features higher clock speeds for performance-oriented tasks (with the benchmark reporting boosting as high as 4.05GHz), whereas the latter is designed toward handling background tasks for better power efficiency.
No information is available as far as which GPU this chip is using, although if the chip is indeed based on the GB10, we could be looking at up to 6,144 CUDA cores, which is exactly the same as an RTX 5070. In theory, this could put this chip right next to AMD’s Ryzen AI Max series, which similarly has a large integrated GPU similar in performance to its mid-range desktop GPUs.
Source: Videocardz
Pokdepinion: Ultimately it’s the compatibility that decides how good this chip will be when it comes to gaming.