Maker Lisuan flaunts new design details for its LX 7G100 gaming card

Meanwhile, the older 7G105 GPU name no longer appears on the site; all four cards now sit under the LX product branding.

Maker Lisuan flaunts new design details for its LX 7G100 gaming card
Maker Lisuan flaunts new design details for its LX 7G100 gaming card Photo: Toms Hardware

All four cards now sit under the LX product branding.

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Lisuan Tech has updated its official product pages and flaunted new design details for its LX 7G100 gaming card.

The firm also filled out the expanded specification listings for the LX Ultra, LX Pro, and LX Max professional GPUs, filling in server-specific specs for the LX Ultra — including 16-way virtual GPU support, confidential computing protection, data encryption, and secure display — that hadn’t previously been disclosed by the company.

Meanwhile, the older 7G105 GPU name no longer appears on the site; all four cards now sit under the LX product branding.

The LX Ultra is the most server-oriented card in the lineup, listed with 24GB of GDDR6, ECC support, a pixel fill rate of up to 192 GP/s, a texture fill rate of up to 384 GT/s, and FP32 throughput of up to 24 TFLOPS.

Its video codec figures are different from the rest of the GPUs, with a 16x 1080p60 decode and 8x 1080p60 encode, compared to HEVC 8K60 decode and HEVC 8K30 encode on the workstation-class and gaming models.

The LX Ultra uses a blower-style cooler, targets servers and rack-mounted all-in-one systems, and carries no listed display outputs or API support on the updated page.

Finally, the consumer LX 7G100 gaming card appears on the same page with the same core specs confirmed at AWE 2026: 12GB GDDR6, 192 TMUs, 96 ROPs, PCIe 4.0 x16, and up to 225W board power through a single 8-pin connector.

The card offers four DisplayPort 1.4a outputs and no HDMI.

New product renders confirm that the gaming card uses a triple-fan cooler with two fans partially concealed under the shroud, resolving earlier ambiguity created by earlier renders that suggested a blower-style design.

Lisuan has still not published clock speeds, memory bus widths, board power figures, or the GPU die configuration for any of the LX professional cards.

Pre-orders for the gaming card open on March 17, ahead of the June 18 retail launch in China.

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Luke James is a freelance writer and journalist.

Although his background is in legal, he has a personal interest in all things tech, especially hardware and microelectronics, and anything regulatory.

Source: This article was originally published by Toms Hardware

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