Leaked Computex Listing Shows a New Gaming Handheld Featuring Unreleased Intel Lunar Lake Processor

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Image: Weibu Information (via Computex Taipei)

A leaked Computex listing has spilled the beans on what appears to be the first gaming handheld to feature Intel’s upcoming Lunar Lake processors. Intel has yet to formally reveal when it plans to announce the launch of Lunar Lake but could do so very soon. Meanwhile, thanks to the efforts of a data miner, details for two of its Core Ultra 5 processors have recently been discovered.

The MSI Claw was the first gaming handheld to break away from the AMD Ryzen pack by using an Intel Core Ultra 5 Meteor Lake processor but it looks like an overseas OEM/ODM manufacturer called Weibu Information will be the first to utilize Lunar Lake technology. As spotted by PCWorld, a now-deleted, but archived, listing for Computex 2024 shows some of the specs for the GP10.

GP10 Specs

Image: Computex Taipei

The GP10 has a 10.95-inch (11″) multitouch display that uses a 16:10 aspect ratio which has become increasingly popular among laptops and other mobile devices recently. It has a resolution of 1920 x 1200 at 120 Hz. It is not known which Lunar Lake processor(s) are being offered but leaked data for Core Ultra 5 200V models indicate a max of 32 GB and this listing does show an option of up to 64 GB of memory which could indicate an additional 32 GB is possible via the PCB. We also see a somewhat standard M.2 slot, although it lists a maximum of 2 TB, but then USB 4.0, Type-C, and Wifi 6 along with a standard audio jack plus a TF Card slot. TF cards have been making a bit of a comeback overseas in various devices it seems.

Lunar Lake

Some other details to keep in mind with this leaked Computex listing is that the Lunar Lake 200V processors use a package design that includes LPDDR5X @ 8533 MH/s on the package along with the CPU and NPU combined with Xe2 (Battlemage) graphics. If using a Core 5 Ultra the graphics would have 7 Xe2 cores but if the Core Ultra 7 is used that then increases to 8 cores. Both processor tiers feature 4 big Lion Cove P-Cores and 4 little Skymont E-Cores. Lunar Lake’s NPU could offer up to 3x more TOPS than its Meteor Lake predecessors. Intel has purposely designed it to operate between 8W and 30W making it ideal for mobile applications such as this and it has been mentioned that 15W could be the sweet spot for performance/battery life.

It should be noted that even though Weibu Information’s GP10 is the first handheld to be spotted as getting Lunar Lake technology it wouldn’t be a big surprise if MSI announces an updated CLAW with it sometime soon as well.

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Peter Brosdahl
As a child of the 70’s I was part of the many who became enthralled by the video arcade invasion of the 1980’s. Saving money from various odd jobs I purchased my first computer from a friend of my dad, a used Atari 400, around 1982. Eventually it would end up being a lifelong passion of upgrading and modifying equipment that, of course, led into a career in IT support.

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