Laptops

Computex 2026 UK preview: what to wait for before buying a laptop

Computex 2026 UK preview: Intel keynote 2 June, Nvidia N1X Arm laptops, AMD Ryzen AI 400 and what UK laptop buyers should wait for before checkout.

Computex 2026 UK Intel sensory AI demo with Ella robot barista

Computex 2026 UK laptop buyers should wait. Intel has confirmed that CEO Lip-Bu Tan will deliver the Computex 2026 keynote on Monday 2 June, and the four-day Taipei show will set the agenda for every AI PC, laptop chip and gaming machine UK readers will see on Currys and John Lewis shelves between July and Christmas.

Key facts
  • Computex 2026 runs 2 to 5 June in Taipei. Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan keynotes 2 June at 1:30 PM Taiwan time, which is 6:30 AM UK time.
  • Headline themes: AI PCs, CPUs as AI engines, edge AI, x86 as the AI base architecture, data centre to client continuum.
  • Expected hardware: Nvidia N1 and N1X Arm laptop chips, Intel Panther Lake Core Ultra successors, AMD Ryzen AI 400 refreshes, MediaTek PC silicon.
  • UK retail impact: ASUS ROG Strix SCAR 18 already on ASUS UK store with a generational price increase, more UK pricing expected after 5 June.
  • Holdouts: pure non-AI laptops are quietly being demoted by Computex organisers; every keynote-tier brand is leading with AI features.

Why Computex 2026 UK laptop buyers should hold their wallets

Computex 2026 UK readers shopping for a laptop now have two choices. Either commit to a current-generation Intel Core Ultra Series 2 or AMD Ryzen AI 300 machine on a Currys or John Lewis deal this week, or wait until 6 June to see what Computex announces and what UK retailers price after that. Our straight read for most UK buyers: wait. The next two weeks contain enough new platforms to make today’s prices look pre-refresh.

The Computex 2026 UK news that will hit hardest is Nvidia’s N1 and N1X Arm laptop platform. Industry leaks point to Nvidia using Computex to detail its first consumer Arm laptop chip, the N1X, reported to feature a 20-core Arm CPU and integrated Blackwell-architecture GPU at the top end. UK readers familiar with our work on why the x86 laptop is finished already know where this is heading. Arm laptops with discrete-class GPU performance and 20-plus hours of battery life make every UK x86 ultraportable on a Currys shelf look two generations behind.

Computex 2026 UK Intel keynote announcement banner showing the AI-driven computing event
Image: Intel

Intel at Computex 2026 UK: silicon innovation and the CPU as AI engine

Intel has briefed for weeks that Computex 2026 will be the silicon innovation moment. CEO Lip-Bu Tan, ten months into the job, needs to set out a credible AI PC roadmap that does not depend on Nvidia. Intel’s case at Computex 2026 UK observers will hear is that the CPU is back as a critical AI engine, complementing GPUs and accelerators rather than ceding the AI workload entirely. The new Intel Core Ultra Series 3 platform, already shipping in entry-tier 2026 Lenovo and HP laptops, gets the public Computex keynote upgrade with vPro variants for UK enterprise.

For UK buyers, Intel’s Computex 2026 UK message matters because the high street is Intel-heavy. Dell Inspiron, Lenovo ThinkPad, HP Pavilion and Acer Aspire ranges on Currys and Argos shelves are still mostly Core Ultra Series 2 today. The Computex 2026 announcement should kick off the Core Ultra Series 3 retail wave, which means real UK price competition before Black Friday. Our coverage of the AMD Ryzen AI Max 400 vs Apple M5 fight is the closest UK readers can get to a sense of where mainstream laptop silicon is going.

Video: Computex Taipei, Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan keynote

Nvidia, AMD and the gaming laptop wave at Computex 2026 UK

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is co-headlining Computex 2026, and that signals an AI gaming laptop reset for UK buyers. Computex 2026 UK gamers will see the next wave of RTX 5090 Laptop GPU machines from ASUS, Lenovo, MSI and Razer. ASUS has already put the 2026 ROG Strix SCAR 18 on its UK store, complete with Intel Core Ultra 9 290HX Plus, RTX 5090 Laptop and a 4K 240Hz Mini-LED display, at a notable generational price increase. UK readers comparing high-end gaming laptops should expect every premium 18-inch model to ship with a similar AI overlay during Q3.

AMD’s Ryzen AI 400 Series silicon is the other Computex 2026 UK lever. Lenovo positioned the Legion 5a 15 with Ryzen AI 400 at an estimated US launch price around $1,499 in its CES 2026 announcement, with UK availability expected in late June. The MediaTek angle is also worth a UK eye: industry coverage has flagged MediaTek teasers around “radically new PC experiences” for Computex 2026, widely interpreted as an Nvidia-co-developed Arm laptop chip aimed at the £700 to £1,000 mainstream tier. If that ships, our best laptop under £700 UK 2026 buying guide will be due a refresh by autumn.

Computex 2026 UK Intel Core Series 3 processor launch header on AI laptop
Image: Intel

UK pricing reality after Computex 2026

Computex 2026 UK pricing also faces a memory shortage problem. DRAM and BOM costs have climbed across recent earnings cycles and component analysts have flagged step-change price increases expected from September 2026 as new contract pricing kicks in. UK buyers who can buy before that step change get better value. Watch for ASUS, Acer and MSI UK retail pricing in the 3 to 7 June window; that is when Computex 2026 announcements typically translate into real Currys and John Lewis listings.

The currency reality also matters. UK pricing has not tracked US pricing one-to-one for AI laptops; the UK markup over the US dollar price is currently 15 to 25 percent after VAT for premium AI PCs. That means a $1,499 US Lenovo Legion 5a is more likely £1,499 in the UK than £1,199. UK readers shopping for an AI laptop should look hard at John Lewis 2-year warranties and Currys CarePlan, both of which materially change the value calculation for kit you intend to keep for three to four years.

Computex 2026 UK Intel and SambaNova AI partnership announcement
Image: Intel and SambaNova

What Computex 2026 UK means against MacBook Air M5 and Pro M5

Computex 2026 UK has one shadow opponent that will not be on stage in Taipei: Apple Silicon. The MacBook Air M5 and MacBook Pro M5 lineup landed in the UK earlier this month and reset the bar for battery life, single-thread performance and quiet running. Computex 2026 UK announcements need to do more than match the M5; they need to undercut on price, beat on battery, or carve out wins in upgradability and AI gaming where Apple does not compete. Our comparison of MacBook Air M5 vs Pro M5 for UK buyers is the benchmark.

If Nvidia’s N1X really does deliver MacBook-level battery life with discrete-GPU performance in a Windows laptop, Computex 2026 UK becomes a turning point in the post-Intel laptop war. Apple’s response will land at WWDC 2026 on 8 June, six days after Intel’s keynote. UK readers should tune in to both and only commit to a laptop purchase after watching both keynotes. The next 14 days will reshape the UK laptop market.

Computex 2026 UK Intel Pro Day showcasing AI PC innovation
Image: Intel
MTW verdict

Computex 2026 UK is the trade show UK laptop buyers must watch this year. Intel’s keynote on 2 June, Nvidia’s joint stage and Apple’s WWDC follow-up on 8 June will decide what the high street stocks until 2027. Do not buy a laptop until 9 June. After that, prices firm up; before that, the playing field shifts daily.

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