China just took its most credible step yet into the discrete gaming GPU market. Lisuan Technology’s 7G100 is now entering pre-sale, and it comes with something no other Chinese gaming GPU has achieved before: full Microsoft WHQL certification.
While most previous Chinese GPU efforts felt more like proof-of-concept projects, the Lisuan 7G100 is being positioned as a real mid-range competitor — and it’s targeting performance close to the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060.
Lisuan 7G100 — China’s first gaming GPU with full WHQL driver certification. (Image: Lisuan Technology)
What the Lisuan 7G100 Actually Brings
The card is based on Lisuan’s own “TrueGPU” architecture, built on a 6nm process. According to the company’s official website, the 7G100 is designed for high-quality gaming, content creation, screen recording, and multitasking.
Key specifications include:
- 12 GB GDDR6 memory on a 192-bit bus
- Up to 24 TFLOPS FP32 compute performance
- 225W TDP (single 8-pin connector)
- 4x DisplayPort 1.4a outputs with support for up to 8K HDR
- Support for DirectX 12 and Vulkan
- Company’s own upscaling technology called NRSS
Lisuan claims the card can deliver performance in the ballpark of an RTX 4060. You can find more official details on their website: www.lisuantech.com
The Big Milestone: WHQL Certification
The most important detail isn’t raw performance — it’s that Lisuan is the first Chinese GPU maker to receive Microsoft’s WHQL (Windows Hardware Quality Labs) certification. This means the drivers are officially signed and can be distributed through Windows Update.
This is a major hurdle that previous Chinese attempts have struggled with. Proper driver support and stability have always been the weakest points for non-NVIDIA/AMD GPUs. WHQL certification is a strong signal that Lisuan is taking compatibility seriously.
Real Talk: How Good Is It Actually?
Let’s be realistic. Even if the 7G100 hits RTX 4060 performance, it’s entering a market where NVIDIA and AMD have massive advantages in software, ray tracing, upscaling (DLSS/FSR), and ecosystem support.
The card will launch with support for over 100 games. That’s respectable, but driver maturity, feature completeness, and long-term optimization will decide whether this becomes a viable alternative or just another interesting Chinese experiment.
At launch, it’s only available in China through JD.com. There’s no word yet on international availability.
What This Means for the GPU Market
This is another data point showing that China is serious about reducing its dependence on Western GPU technology. While it’s still far from threatening NVIDIA’s dominance, consistent progress from companies like Lisuan suggests that domestic alternatives are slowly improving.
For now, the Lisuan 7G100 is mostly relevant for the Chinese market. But if the drivers prove stable and performance holds up in real games, it could become a legitimate budget/mid-range option in regions where price sensitivity is high.
Should You Care?
If you’re outside China, probably not yet. The lack of international availability, unknown real-world driver quality, and missing features like mature ray tracing or advanced upscaling make it a hard recommendation for most users right now.
However, it’s worth watching. Every generation, Chinese GPU efforts get a little better. The fact that Lisuan cleared the WHQL bar is a meaningful step forward.
Final Verdict
The Lisuan 7G100 is currently the most credible Chinese gaming GPU we’ve seen. It has decent specs on paper, targets a realistic performance segment (RTX 4060 class), and — most importantly — finally has proper Windows driver certification.
Whether it can actually compete on features, stability, and software support remains to be seen once independent reviews drop. For now, it’s an interesting development in China’s push to build its own GPU ecosystem.
Pre-sales have started on JD.com. We’ll be watching closely to see how it performs in real games.