Saturday, July 26th 2025

Lisuan Tech Unveils 7G106—China's First 6 Nanometer Gaming GPU

Presenting the new 7G106 gaming GPU. Its creator, Lisuan Tech, is a Chinese deep-tech startup that set out to develop their own gaming chip with the potential to grab a large slice of the PC gaming graphics market, beginning with China. The Chinese gaming industry is built on the philosophy of interesting and engaging gameplay without trying to wow the audience with cutting-edge visual effects; which means it's trying to target the largest possible install-base with mainstream GPUs. The new Lisuan Tech 7G106 is designed to be a locally designed and familiar GPU that gamers can reach out to, without getting entangled in the pricing mess of established brands.

The Lisuan Tech 7G106 is based on the company's own TrueGPU graphics architecture. "7G"—pronounced similarly to "miracle" in Chinese—reflects the team's ambition behind the GPU and the challenges they had to overcome. The 7G106 graphics processor is based on a monolithic die that's built using the TSMC N6 (6 nm DUV) foundry node. It is a contemporary gaming GPU designed to accelerate games and 3D applications with wide API support: DirectX 12, Vulkan 1.3, and OpenGL 4.6. While DirectX 12 is included, ray tracing is not available, meaning there is no DirectX 12 Ultimate. The 7G106 comes with a feature-packed SIMD engine that is able to run calculations with FP32, and the new INT8 data type. The GPU has a maximum throughput of 24 TFLOP/s (FP32). The main compute language is OpenCL 3.0.
Internally, the SIMD engine is backed by a rather large raster graphics pipeline, with up to 192 TMUs, and 96 ROPs present on the silicon. In terms of memory, you get 12 GB of GDDR6 memory across a 192-bit wide memory bus, although the company hasn't finalized the exact memory frequencies yet. The 7G106 is equipped with a modern video acceleration engine, capable of hardware-accelerated AV1 and HEVC decoding at resolutions as high as 8K at 60 FPS. It also supports hardware-accelerated AV1 encoding at 4K at 30 FPS and HEVC encoding at 8K at 30 FPS. In terms of monitor connectivity, you get four DisplayPort 1.4 outputs with support for DSC 1.2b, the GPU doesn't feature HDMI outputs, probably due to the license cost that the HDMI Consortium wants for each installed HDMI port. The GPU communicates with the rest of the PC over a PCI-Express 4.0 x16 host interface.
As for power, Lisuan Tech hasn't put out the GPU's power figures, because it is yet to decide on final clock speeds for engine and memory. While the exact power specs aren't available, renders of the reference-design 7G106 are shown with a single 8-pin PCIe power connector, which enables a maximum power delivery capability of 225 W (150 W from the connector, 75 W from the slot). At today's event we also spotted a variant with a 16-pin power connector, which of course is able to provide much more power than a single 8-pin.

An interesting aspect of the Lisuan Tech 7G106 is its Virtual GPU feature. It is a fully-featured single-root I/O virtualization (SR-IOV) component, with up to 16 containers, which lets you share the GPU to virtual machines running on the same system, so that it can be used in containerized enterprise environments and hyperscalers.

At its launch event earlier today, Lisuan Tech showed off the real-world capabilities of the 7G106. The chip was shown playing "Black Myth Wukong" at 1080p Full HD, where it produced playable framerates. In 3DMark Fire Strike, it scored 26,800 points. Lastly, Lisuan Tech showcased a video of the 7G106 making it decode an 8K 60 FPS video on an 8K 60 Hz display that supports DSC 1.2b. The GPU also scored 111290 points in Geekbench 6.4.0 OpenCL benchmark.

At this time, Lisuan Tech does not have any information on upcoming SKUs or pricing, it's just too early. They received their A0 chip on May 24th, which is the first iteration of a semiconductor used for initial testing, so there's much work ahead. We'll keep you updated.

Update 16:56 UTC: At the event, the company also announced their 7G105 graphics card, which is a SKU targeted at the professional market with 24 GB VRAM, while 7G106 is targeted at consumers. Both cards seem to be based on the same GPU.

Below, some photos from today's launch event in Shanghai
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26 Comments on Lisuan Tech Unveils 7G106—China's First 6 Nanometer Gaming GPU

#1
john_
Did they really used a wccftech chart? REALLY? If I was an investor in this company and seeing a wccftech chart, I would pull my money out immediately.
Posted on Reply
#2
eyenix
2250 points in steel nomad? Like an rx 6700
not bad, interesting for a first gpu.
Posted on Reply
#3
HOkay
john_Did they really used a wccftech chart? REALLY? If I was an investor in this company and seeing a wccftech chart, I would pull my money out immediately.
Haha, oh yeah! That does that even mean, are they using an estimate from a third party leaker?! Maybe they're saying a WCCFTech leak was accurate?
Posted on Reply
#4
ZoneDymo
Cool stuff, man, im looking forward to a chinese company coming in and matching the competition for peanuts.
Aliexpress GPU's here we come!
Posted on Reply
#5
AusWolf
Interesting cooler design. Not counting the flow-through part in the back of the card, there is basically no airflow contacting the heatsink anywhere.
Posted on Reply
#6
tommo1982
There's another variant 7G105 on sideshow, which has double VRAM with ECC. It could be the reason for SR-IOV. Looks like profesionall card.
Posted on Reply
#7
Geofrancis
they are already ahead of intel with performance but I doubt their compatibility.
Posted on Reply
#8
Denver
The claims are unbelievable, they claim to run at 70fps a game that only runs above 60fps on the 5090.

People, I have a bridge to sell you.
Posted on Reply
#9
tpa-pr
DenverThe claims are unbelievable, they claim to run at 70fps a game that only runs above 60fps on the 5090.

People, I have a bridge to sell you.
Yeah, I think I'll wait for some independent reviews myself. We've heard a similar style of claims about the Chinese-home-grown Moore's Threads GPUs too after all.

And making a good GPU is HARD.
Posted on Reply
#10
Marsil
More please! more!! more!!,
More competition is good for gaming community!. Only NVidia suckers disagree!!
Posted on Reply
#11
JustBenching
DenverThe claims are unbelievable, they claim to run at 70fps a game that only runs above 60fps on the 5090.

People, I have a bridge to sell you.
Is that in the charts? What game are you referring to?
Posted on Reply
#12
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
john_Did they really used a wccftech chart? REALLY? If I was an investor in this company and seeing a wccftech chart, I would pull my money out immediately.
Biggest investor is probably the Chinese Government.
Posted on Reply
#13
TommyT
well look kinda good, mybe in 5 years from now. we have a new gpu player?
Posted on Reply
#14
lexluthermiester
Good grief the fud in this thread. The lack of objectivity is astounding.

This had to happen sooner or later, and well, later is now.
btarunrAt its launch event earlier today, Lisuan Tech showed off the real-world capabilities of the 7G106. The chip was shown playing "Black Myth Wukong" at 4K Ultra HD resolution with High settings, where it produced playable framerates. In 3DMark Fire Strike, it scored 26,800 points. Lastly, Lisuan Tech showcased a video of the 7G106 making it decode an 8K 60 FPS video on an 8K 60 Hz display that supports DSC 1.2b. The GPU also scored 111290 points in Geekbench 6.4.0 OpenCL benchmark.
If true, they have really made progress. NVidia, Intel and AMD have something to be concerned about.
Posted on Reply
#15
dicobalt
Even if the performance was decent the drivers would still be a complete nightmare.
Posted on Reply
#16
lexluthermiester
dicobaltEven if the performance was decent the drivers would still be a complete nightmare.
How so?
Posted on Reply
#17
Event Horizon
An entire cargo container's worth of salt required, but I will be cautiously optimistic.
Posted on Reply
#18
Denver
JustBenchingIs that in the charts? What game are you referring to?

[B]WUCHANG: Fallen Feathers.[/B]

www.bilibili.com/video/BV1SC8tzQE86/?vd_source=b1d7076cbe7eab656ccc9e2a8fb982c2
www.ithome.com/0/870/926.htm
"Lisuan Tech also had demo units where they were running Black Myth Wukong at 4K (High Settings). The game was running at a very playable FPSwith over 70 FPS. They also showed off Wuchang: Fallen Features running at 4K (High Settings) at over 70 FPS"



Posted on Reply
#19
Dr. Dro
I welcome competition from all sides against Nvidia and AMD, especially AMD. It's somewhat clear they don't mind being in second place, but they definitely don't want to be in third, and the only way to challenge that position is from under them. Intel and the Chinese companies need to take this fight and kick Radeon in the shins before they get better and actually threaten Nvidia, if anything, to gain some distance from their challengers.
Posted on Reply
#20
konga
Denver

[B]WUCHANG: Fallen Feathers.[/B]

www.bilibili.com/video/BV1SC8tzQE86/?vd_source=b1d7076cbe7eab656ccc9e2a8fb982c2
www.ithome.com/0/870/926.htm
"Lisuan Tech also had demo units where they were running Black Myth Wukong at 4K (High Settings). The game was running at a very playable FPSwith over 70 FPS. They also showed off Wuchang: Fallen Features running at 4K (High Settings) at over 70 FPS"



The Steel Nomad and Fire Strike scores both put it on even footing with the RTX 5050. There's little chance it runs Wuchang that well at native 4K. I think it's safe to assume that they were making heavy use of FSR or TSR and not disclosing it (at least, not in the slide), with either performance or ultra performance mode.

This card is not going to take the world by storm. It will probably not even be sold outside of Asia. But IF the drivers aren't a disaster, and IF they can produce them in good quantities at an affordable price, then it would be good news for the low-end Asian market, which is still massive.
Posted on Reply
#21
L1on
wow the chinese not let her hater to take breath - to make good gpu you need a billions and more than 10 years look to intel>> and may you can or cant
huang said chinese is so close. I didn't believe him

after some years we will so many cheap gpu


Tha last wall EUV
Posted on Reply
#22
Macro Device
Denver

[B]WUCHANG: Fallen Feathers.[/B]

www.bilibili.com/video/BV1SC8tzQE86/?vd_source=b1d7076cbe7eab656ccc9e2a8fb982c2
www.ithome.com/0/870/926.htm
"Lisuan Tech also had demo units where they were running Black Myth Wukong at 4K (High Settings). The game was running at a very playable FPSwith over 70 FPS. They also showed off Wuchang: Fallen Features running at 4K (High Settings) at over 70 FPS"



There had been some misunderstanding.

They ran this game at 1080p:
Posted on Reply
#23
Denver
Macro DeviceThere had been some misunderstanding.

They ran this game at 1080p:
Posted on Reply
#24
Macro Device
Denver
The translation is wrong. Promo pictures clearly show 1080p.
Posted on Reply
#25
W1zzard
Thanks, fixed the text to mention 1080p
Posted on Reply
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