Nvidia proves its commitment to PC with 2030 RTX Spark roadmap
Nvidia details its long-term roadmap for RTX Spark and Windows
Nvidia plans to start “a new era of PC“, and that means that RTX Spark cannot be a one-off product. RTX Spark is launching this year, and Nvidia is offering a processor with a 20-core ARM-based CPU with integrated RTX 5070-level graphics. This new processor aims to revolutionise the Windows PC experience, and Grace Blackwell is just the start of this journey. Nvidia has unveiled its RTX Spark roadmap, and it affirms Nvidia’s long-term commitment to Windows PCs.
Nvidia has confirmed that its DGX Station hardware will receive Windows support. Furthermore, Nvidia has confirmed future generations of Vera Rubin- and Rosa Feynman-based hardware. This includes the new DGX Workstation and RTX Spark hardware for Windows.
In Nvidia’s 2027-2028 release Window, Nvidia’s roadmap has RTX Spark hardware with a next-generation Vera CPU, Rubin graphics, and LPDDR6 memory. That means a stronger CPU, stronger graphics, and more memory bandwidth. Following Nvidia’s Rubin generation comes Feynman in 2029-2030. This listing doesn’t include Nvidia’s memory support plans for RTX Spark, but includes Nvidia’s plans for next-generation Rosa CPU hardware and Feynman graphics.
Long-term plans for RTX Spark and Windows
Nvidia’s RTX Spark roadmap extends to 2030 and covers three product generations. That should be enough to convince hardware vendors and software developers to support Nvidia’s hardware. Nvidia has no intention to abandon this space. That said, it remains to be seen how competitive Nvidia’s Grace Blackwell RTX Spark is, and how large Nvidia’s generational improvements will be.
Nvidia’s first RTX Spark laptops and desktop PCs will become available later this year. Nvidia has confirmed a “Fall 2026” launch for its hardware.
You can join the discussion on Nvidia’s RTX Spark superchip roadmap on the OC3D Forums.

