Nvidia, Arm and Microsoft's Windows team are all pointing at the same thing: a "new era of PC." The coordinated tease is expected to lead into an announcement in Taipei, where Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is scheduled to deliver a GTC Taipei keynote on June 1.

The phrase is still a teaser, not a product sheet. According to Game Rant, the official posts from Nvidia, Windows and Arm included coordinates for the Taipei Music Center, the venue for Huang's keynote. Industry speculation has centered on Nvidia's long-rumored N1 and N1X processors, which are expected to target Arm-based Windows PCs.

Why PC gamers should watch the Taipei reveal

Arm-based Windows machines are not new, but Nvidia's name gives the tease a sharper gaming angle. Windows-on-Arm laptops have usually been sold around battery life, thin designs and mobile-style efficiency. A Nvidia-backed Windows-on-Arm platform would put graphics performance, AI features and game compatibility under a much brighter spotlight.

The timing also lines up with the AI PC push. Microsoft introduced Copilot+ PCs in May 2024 as Windows devices with hardware capable of running local AI features, and Computex Taipei 2026 lists AI and computing among its main themes. The show runs June 2 through June 5 at multiple Taipei venues, including Taipei Nangang Exhibition Center halls and the Taipei International Convention Center.

The rumored N1 and N1X chip picture

The current expectation is that Nvidia could use Huang's keynote to reveal its N1 and N1X laptop processors, though none of the companies have confirmed those names in the teasers. The reported chips have been linked to Dell and Lenovo systems, with Lenovo product leaks reportedly naming IdeaPad Slim, Yoga Pro, Yoga 9 2-in-1 and Legion models.

That rumored Lenovo list is especially relevant to gamers because the Legion brand is tied directly to gaming laptops and desktops. Reports cited by Game Rant also point to new configurations across Lenovo's Legion 5, Legion 7 and Legion 9 lines, plus a later 2026 refresh for Legion T5 desktop PCs.

Nothing is final until Nvidia, Arm or Microsoft says exactly what is being announced. Still, a coordinated teaser from all three companies makes this more than a routine keynote hint. If the reveal is the expected Nvidia-powered Windows-on-Arm platform, it could mark one of the biggest PC hardware shifts heading into Computex 2026.