
ASUS is going all-in on AI at Computex 2026, and the new ProArt lineup is the proof. The company just announced the ProArt P16, P14, and a new ProArt Mini PC, all powered by NVIDIA’s new RTX Spark superchip. These honestly look like they’re going to be some serious workhorses for creators.
The headline spec here is wild. With 1 petaflop of AI performance and up to 128GB of unified memory in these things. That’s enough to render 90GB+ 3D scenes, edit 12K 4:2:2 video, generate 4K AI videos, and run 120B-parameter LLMs with up to 1 million tokens of context. Locally. On a laptop. That’s the kind of horsepower most people had to rent from a cloud provider just a year or two ago.
The RTX Spark chip itself is interesting, too. It pairs an NVIDIA Blackwell RTX GPU with 6,144 CUDA cores and fifth-gen Tensor Cores with FP4 precision, connected to a 20-core NVIDIA Grace CPU via NVLink-C2C. Basically, it’s built from the ground up to run AI agents locally, which is where the whole industry is heading.

Slim, light, and built for creators
The ProArt P16 and P14 are 13% thinner and 16% lighter than the previous generation P16, which is impressive considering what’s packed inside. They come with ASUS Lumina Pro OLED displays with Delta E < 1 color accuracy, up to 1,600 nits of brightness, and anti-reflection coating. The P16 goes up to 4K 120Hz with NVIDIA G-Sync, while the P14 maxes out at 3K. The battery is rated at up to 99.9 Wh, which ASUS calls all-day battery life.
You can grab them in Nano Black or a new Neo White finish, and both have anti-smudge surface treatment. Having reviewed some of ASUS’ ProArt laptops last year, I can say that this is a really great material for a laptop and it truly does not show fingerprints.
Then there’s the ProArt Mini PC, which crams that same 1 petaflop of AI compute into a 150 x 150 x 51 mm chassis. It’s got 10GbE wired networking, M.2 PCIe Gen 5 x4 expansion, and up to 140W of thermal headroom. For anyone doing edge AI work or building out a compact studio setup, this thing is going to be a great option.
ASUS is also bundling three months of Adobe Creative Cloud, and Adobe is apparently re-architecting Photoshop and Premiere from the ground up for RTX Spark, promising 2x faster AI and graphics performance.
The ProArt P16, P14, and Mini PC will start rolling out in select regions in fall 2026. Pricing and full specs are coming later. Hopefully, the US is on that list, because this lineup is too good to skip.
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