Nvidia unveil their first all-in-one laptop processor, with support for DLSS, ray tracing, frame gen, and all those other RTX features you love and hate
After years of whispers around Nvidia maybe, possibly, perhaps getting into CPU-making, theyβre making it official with RTX Spark: a fully integrated laptop SoC (System on a Chip), coming to thin 'n' lights in Autumn this year.
Unsurprisingly, given the source of Nvidiaβs trillions, RTX Spark has a big focus on agentic AI work, the official descriptions of which are so inducive of malaise that I canβt even bring myself to copy them in from the press release. But there is plenty of note for those whoβd use their lightweight laptop to play games, as the SoCβs graphics processor is based on the same Blackwell architecture as Nvidiaβs GeForce RTX 50 series of standalone graphics cards. That means itβll support DLSS 4.5 upscaling, Multi-Frame Generation, ray tracing, Reflex, and G-Sync, all hitherto unseen (or at least extremely rare) on what is essentially integrated graphics. Unless you count the Nintendo Switch 2. And round 'ere, we donβt.