Strike NVIDIA RTX4060 with SMIC 6 nanometers, and the G100 test only catches up with 13 years ago GTX 660 Ti

The official WeChat of China Card New Creative Computing Technology announced that the G100 Card has completed the opening test. The G100 claims to be China's first 6-nanometer card, and claims performance can catch up with the NVIDIA (NVIDIA) R...


The official WeChat of China Card New Creative Computing Technology announced that the G100 Card has completed the opening test. The G100 claims to be China's first 6-nanometer card, and claims performance can catch up with the NVIDIA (NVIDIA) RTX 4060, but the test results are only as high as the GTX 660 Ti standard 13 years ago.

According to reports from

Tom's Hardware, the first batch of running scores of the Computing Technology G100 have been on Geekbench. It is recognized as China's first domestically produced 6-nanometer GPU, OpenCL-based test, and the G100 is paired with AMD Ryzen APU on Windows 10 systems, but its performance is not outstanding. The base test scored 15,524 points, and its performance was similar to the GTX 660 Ti 13 years ago.

Computer Technology announced in May that the G100 GPU is based on its self-developed TrueGPU architecture and adopts a 6-nanometer-level process. It is likely to be SMIC International, and its performance is comparable to that of the NVIDIA RTX 4060. Although the specifications are not announced, the Geekbench run-point list shows at least 32 calculation units, 256MB display memory and 300MHz operation speed. If the specification is accurate, it is only considered as the entry SKU, or it may explain the reasons for low performance.

The test platform is equipped with Ryzen 7 8700G processor, 64GB DDR5-4800 memory and Battle-AX B650M-Plus motherboard. The Lisuan G100 scored 15,524 points in OpenCL test, and Geekbench public location ranked the slowest GPU. GPUs with similar scores include the 13-year-old GTX 660 Ti, the Exynos 2400's Samsung Xclipse 940, and the Radeon R9 370 (GCN 1.0).

Computing Technology previously stated that the first batch of G100 chips were successfully launched, and the basis tests were further confirmed by their statement. It is likely that the film is completed and it is believed to be in the risk production stage. It will be produced at the end of the year or at the beginning of 2026. Even so, significant progress is still needed to achieve available performance and stable operation.



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