Lisuan Technology announced that its consumer-grade gaming graphics card, the LX 7G100, will become available for pre-order on May 20 at 8:00 p.m. via JD.com’s official store. Built using TSMC’s 6nm process, the LX 7G100 features Lisuan’s proprietary TrueGPU architecture. It comes equipped with 12GB of GDDR6 memory, 192 texture mapping units (TMUs), and 96 raster operations pipelines (ROPs). The card utilizes a PCIe 4.0 x16 interface, draws a maximum power of 225W (requiring just one 8-pin power connector), and offers quad DisplayPort 1.4a outputs capable of supporting 8K60 HDR content; however, there is no HDMI port. On the API front, it fully supports DirectX 12, Vulkan 1.3, OpenGL 4.6, and OpenCL 3.0, and has earned Microsoft’s WHQL driver certification — making it the first domestically produced gaming graphics card to achieve this distinction. At launch, over 100 games are expected to be compatible, including Black Myth: Wukong, Cyberpunk 2077, Elden Ring, Red Dead Redemption 2, and Resident Evil 4.
In terms of performance, Lisuan positions the LX 7G100 as comparable to NVIDIA’s RTX 4060 based on synthetic benchmarks like 3DMark (its FP32 computing power clocks in at roughly 24 TFLOPS). Nevertheless, there remains a notable gap between such results and real-world gaming performance; independent verification data is still pending. Notably, this model lacks hardware-level ray tracing capabilities as well as AI upscaling technologies akin to DLSS or FSR. Consequently, the maturity of its driver ecosystem will largely dictate how well it performs in actual gameplay scenarios. To counter skepticism regarding domestic GPU initiatives often remaining at the prototype stage, Lisuan previously released footage showing mass production and rigorous testing procedures. Pricing details have yet to be disclosed, while initial sales will be restricted solely to mainland China.