Is China’s self: developed graphics card coming? Lisuan LX 7G106 will go on sale on June 18, and also emphasizes that it can run is gaining traction fast, and early community reaction suggests this one has real momentum.
As with major stories across retro and modern gaming, the key details are in how players are responding, how the platform owners move next, and whether this remains a short spike or a longer trend.

Chinese GPU manufacturer Lisuan Technology recently officially announced that its LX 7G106 consumer-grade graphics card will go on sale in China on June 18, and the sales platform is JD.com. The most noteworthy thing about this card is not only that it finally has a clear release date, but that the official directly stated this time: it can run many popular games on Steam, and even named “Cyberpunk 2077”. For a Chinese self-developed graphics card, this kind of statement is no longer just a slogan, but it begins to want to truly enter the mainstream PC game market.
Not only can you turn on your phone, but now you can even play Steam games

At the AWE 2026 event, Lisuan positioned the LX 7G106 as a 12GB GDDR6 graphics card for players, and stated that it can run Steam games including “Cyberpunk 2077”, “Black Myth: Wukong” and “Resident Evil 4 Remake”. This signal is actually very clear, because it means that Li Suan is no longer just showing off technology or corporate narratives, but is starting to push products into the real consumer market. To put it bluntly, what this Chinese self-developed graphics card wants to prove now is not just “we can do it”, but “we really want to enter the gaming market.”
This Chinese self-developed graphics card actually supports DX12?

Rather than simply listing a few games it can run, the more important thing about LX 7G106 is that it supports DirectX 12. Because for modern Windows games, DX12 is almost the basic threshold, especially since a large number of mainstream new games on Steam have this set. In the past, Chinese GPUs have always been embarrassed in this area. Whether they can support DX12 well will, to some extent, truly be the watershed in whether they can truly enter the mainstream PC graphics card market. Therefore, Lisuan’s repeated emphasis on DX12 this time is to a certain extent telling the outside world: This Chinese self-developed graphics card is not just used to run display screens, but to start to touch the real Windows game ecosystem.
Is it too much to brag about, or should we wait and see first?
Of course, there is still a lot of key information about the LX 7G106 that has not been made public, such as actual performance, driver maturity, upscaling technology, frame filling technology, and even the ray tracing support that players are most concerned about. It is not yet complete. Therefore, it is not too early to trumpet it as an RTX killer at this stage. Next, we will see whether the actual performance can support this wave of expectations after it is launched on June 18.