Moore Threads unveils Huagang GPU architecture at developer conference

Chinese GPU developer Moore Threads has introduced its Huagang architecture, promising significant advances in gaming and AI performance. Set for a 2026 launch, the design targets self-reliance in semiconductors amid global export curbs. While details remain sparse, the company highlighted ambitious benchmarks for upcoming products.

At the recent MUSA Developer Conference, Moore Threads presented its next-generation Huagang architecture, dubbed "Flowerpot" in some translations. This platform aims to power both gaming and artificial intelligence applications, with a full rollout planned for 2026. The announcement focused on performance projections rather than in-depth technical breakdowns, underscoring China's efforts to build domestic GPU capabilities in the face of international restrictions.

Central to the reveal is the Lushan gaming GPU, which will replace the existing MTT S80 and S90 models. Moore Threads asserts that Lushan will deliver a 15-fold increase in AAA game rendering speed and a 50-fold enhancement in ray tracing capabilities. It incorporates a second-generation hardware ray tracing engine and complete DirectX 12 Ultimate compatibility for improved software integration. Memory capacity is expected to reach 64 GB, a quadrupling from the current 16 GB GDDR6 in prior models. Additional touted gains include 64 times faster AI computations, 16 times better geometry processing, four times higher texture fill rates, and eight times quicker atomic memory operations. The architecture introduces UniTE, a unified rendering system with an integrated AI processing unit.

Complementing this, the Huashan AI GPU features a dual-chiplet configuration equipped with nine HBM modules. The firm claims its performance rivals Nvidia's Hopper and Blackwell series, with memory bandwidth surpassing that of the Nvidia B200. Huashan supports a range of precision formats from FP4 to FP64, including proprietary MTFP4, MTFP6, and MTFP8 options. Scalability extends to clusters exceeding 100,000 units through MTLink 4.0, offering 1,314 GB/s interconnect speed. Compared to current offerings, it promises a 50 percent rise in compute density and tenfold efficiency improvements.

Although no gaming demonstrations were shown, a benchmark on the forthcoming MTT S5000 GPU—unrelated to Huashan—ran the DeepSeek V3 model at 1,000 tokens per second in decoding and 4,000 in prefill phases, edging out Nvidia's Hopper performance. These developments reflect Beijing's drive toward technological independence, though the claims await validation as products near market.

Awọn iroyin ti o ni ibatan

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announces full production of Vera Rubin AI superchips at CES 2026, with futuristic chip visuals on stage.
Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Nvidia's Vera Rubin AI chips enter full production

Ti AI ṣe iroyin Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced at CES 2026 that the company's next-generation AI superchip platform, Vera Rubin, is now in full production. The platform, first revealed in 2024, promises to reduce costs for training and running AI models. Customers can expect deliveries later this year.

Maxsun has introduced a compact Mini-ITX motherboard equipped with four DDR5 slots, positioning it as a competitor to NVIDIA’s high-performance Petaflop AI mini PC setups. The design emphasizes enhanced memory capabilities for AI applications. Testing shows its airflow optimization lowers system temperatures by about 10°C.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Shanghai-based GPU maker MetaX made a spectacular debut on the Star Market, with shares opening at 700 yuan, a 569% increase from the IPO price of 104.66 yuan. The stock climbed further to 824.50 yuan intraday.

Hangzhou-based startup DeepSeek has not announced plans for its next major AI model release, but its technical papers suggest potential advances. The papers highlight how AI infrastructure innovations could drive efficiency and scale up model performance.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

The U.S. Department of Commerce announced on Tuesday that it would allow Nvidia to resume shipments of H200 chips to Chinese customers, marking the latest move by the Trump administration to ease technology export restrictions to China. The H200 is Nvidia's second-most-advanced AI processor, previously restricted over concerns about bolstering China's tech and military capabilities.

AMD is set to release its first personal computer, the Ryzen AI Halo, in 2026. The device aims to rival Nvidia's DGX Spark mini PC with strong capabilities in local AI processing. It promises to manage multiple displays and AI tasks efficiently.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Intel is set to reveal details on its next-generation processors during its CES 2026 event in Las Vegas. The company will highlight the Core Ultra Series 3 CPUs, known as Panther Lake, amid ongoing competition in the chip industry. The launch comes as Intel addresses challenges in profitability and market position.

 

 

 

Ojú-ìwé yìí nlo kuki

A nlo kuki fun itupalẹ lati mu ilọsiwaju wa. Ka ìlànà àṣírí wa fun alaye siwaju sii.
Kọ