Lisuan Tech sells thirty thousand LX 7G100 in two days in China

Published on May 25, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Chinese company Lisuan Tech has sold out the first batch of its LX 7G100 graphics card in 48 hours, accumulating 30,000 pre-orders. The model, based on the TrueGPU architecture and with drivers certified by Microsoft WHQL, allows running modern games with DirectX 12, although its performance lags behind other 2026 options. The new batch will arrive on June 18, but for now it is only sold in China.

Chinese tech warehouse scene, workers scanning QR codes on stacks of LX 7G100 graphics card boxes, glowing digital order counter showing 30,000 units sold in 48 hours, one card partially disassembled revealing TrueGPU architecture and copper heat pipes, monitor displaying DirectX 12 benchmark test in progress, Microsoft WHQL certification badge illuminated on packaging, industrial shelving with restock pallets arriving, cinematic engineering visualization, cool blue LED lighting, metallic PCB details, realistic warehouse atmosphere, photorealistic technical illustration

TrueGPU and WHQL: Lisuan's technical approach 🎯

The LX 7G100 uses a TrueGPU architecture designed to optimize power consumption and latency in graphics tasks. WHQL certified drivers guarantee basic compatibility with the Windows ecosystem, including support for DirectX 12. However, in preliminary benchmarks, the card does not reach the figures of mid-range GPUs from 2026. Lisuan bets on a functional profile, not on competing in raw power, which explains its adjusted price and its focus on a specific domestic market.

30,000 brave souls trust that TrueGPU is not just marketing 🚀

30,000 people in China have shelled out their money for a card that promises to run modern games, but without matching those from 2026. Either they are very optimistic, or they like to bet big. The curious thing is that Lisuan is already selling the second batch for June, perhaps because they know that in the land of a thousand clones, the first one to arrive sells. That said, if the LX 7G100 fails, at least they will have a nice piece of tech museum memorabilia.