Domestic Engineering Milestone Achieved
China has launched its first self-developed gaming graphics card, the Lisuan LX 7G100, marking a significant engineering achievement amidst global semiconductor restrictions. The card has secured official Windows certification (WHQL) and demonstrates the capability to run modern AAA titles, achievements considered noteworthy within China's nascent domestic GPU landscape. This release represents a substantial leap from earlier iterations, which performed comparably to much older hardware. The LX 7G100 utilizes a 6nm process and is equipped with 12GB of GDDR6 memory. It supports key graphics APIs including DirectX 12, Vulkan 1.3, OpenGL 4.6, and OpenCL 3.0, aligning it with the requirements of most current PC games. Lisuan Technology has also introduced its own upscaling technology, called NRSS.

Performance and Market Position Under Scrutiny
Early testing of the retail version of the Lisuan LX 7G100 reveals performance levels that fall short of original claims, generally hovering around the performance of an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060. Benchmarks for titles like Black Myth: Wukong show frame rates in the mid-50s, while Forza Horizon 5 on a low preset managed around 48 frames per second. This performance, coupled with a price point approaching $500 USD, makes it a difficult proposition for consumers when compared to established offerings. Reviewers have noted that while the card runs modern games with surprisingly few crashes, the driver software requires significant refinement, with limited options in the control panel and features like overclocking modes failing to persist after reboots.
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Background and Market Aspirations
The launch of the Lisuan LX 7G100, officially available for pre-order around May 20th, 2026, is an ambitious move into a market long dominated by NVIDIA and AMD, with Intel Arc holding a smaller share. Lisuan Technology has stated that over 100 titles are expected to run as intended from the outset. The company plans a broader lineup, including professional-oriented cards named LX MAX, LX PRO, and LX ULTRA, collectively part of the "Lisuan eXtreme LX Series." A limited "Founders Edition" is also being produced, with only 1,000 units available, clearly drawing inspiration from NVIDIA's naming conventions. The company's initial marketing hinted at performance rivaling the GeForce RTX 4060, a claim now widely questioned by initial independent assessments.
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