
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced at CES 2026 in Las Vegas this week that its new superchip platform, dubbed Vera Rubin, was on schedule and set to be released later this year.
The news was one of the key takeaways from the highly anticipated keynote from Huang. Nvidia is the dominant player powering the AI industry, so a new line of chips is obviously a big deal. Here are four things to know as we await Vera Rubin’s drop later this year.
1. There are 6 new chips across the Rubin platform
Nvidia introduced six chips on the so-called Rubin platform, one of which is the so-called Vera Rubin superchip that combines one Vera CPU and two Rubin GPUs in a processor.
« Rubin arrives at exactly the right moment, as AI computing demand for both training and inference is going through the roof, » Huang said in a statement. « With our annual cadence of delivering a new generation of AI supercomputers — and extreme codesign across six new chips — Rubin takes a giant leap toward the next frontier of AI. »
2. The new line of chips is aimed at big companies
Massive AI companies will look to package different parts of this new line of chips together to make massive supercomputers that power their products.
« These huge systems are what hyperscalers like Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and social media giant Meta are spending billions of dollars to get their hands on, » wrote Yahoo.
3. We’re not exactly sure where production is on the Vera Rubin
Nvidia assured the public the chips were set to be released this year, but when, exactly, remains unclear.
« Typically, production for chips this advanced—which Nvidia is building with its longtime partner TSMC—starts at low volume while the chips go through testing and validation and ramps up at a later stage, » wrote Wired.
There had been rumors of delays, so the announcement at CES seems aimed at quelling those fears.
4. The chips should make AI more efficient
Nvidia has promised the Vera Rubin superchips are powerful and more efficient, which should, in turn, make AI products relying on them more efficient. That’s why major companies will likely be lining up to purchase the new line of products. Huang said the Rubin chips could generate tokens — the units used to measure output — ten times more efficiently.
We’re still waiting to get all the details — and to see when the chips actually hit the market — but the announcement certainly was a major bit of AI news out of CES.
Head to the Mashable CES 2026 hub for the latest news and live updates from the biggest show in tech, where Mashable journalists are reporting live.