The OneXPlayer X1 is stepping into the spotlight with powerful specs and a fresh CPU. It’s expected to debut with Intel’s Panther Lake architecture and a lesser-known Arc B370 GPU. Even more notably, it packs 32 GB of RAM, outmatching most handheld rivals right out of the gate.
OneXPlayer X1 to feature Panther Lake and Arc B370

Earlier leaks suggested the Arc B380 would power Intel’s handheld lineup. Instead, new Geekbench data reveals that the OneXPlayer X1 uses the Arc B370, paired with the Core Ultra 5 338H chip. This 12-core processor includes four performance cores and eight efficient ones.
The Arc B370 reportedly comes with 10 Xe3 cores and a boost clock of 2.4 GHz. Combined with the CPU’s 4.7 GHz ceiling and a 65–80 W TDP range, the setup targets higher performance without jumping into desktop-tier power demands.
Benchmarks don’t show the whole picture
Early OneXPlayer X1 benchmarks on Geekbench 6 haven’t outpaced its Lunar Lake or Meteor Lake predecessors. But that’s not unusual. Pre-release units often run under lower wattage or without final firmware.
Even so, the specs hint at a strong showing. With the Core Ultra 5 chip and the Arc B370, the new X1 isn’t aimed at casual performance. It’s positioned to compete with premium AMD-based handhelds in both graphics and processing.
Why 32 GB RAM matters in a handheld
One standout detail? The OneXPlayer X1 will ship with 32 GB of RAM double what many rivals offer. That’s a major advantage in emulation, multitasking, and memory-heavy titles. It also future-proofs the device against increasingly demanding PC ports.
Here’s what we know so far:
- Intel Core Ultra 5 338H processor
- Arc B370 GPU with 10 Xe3 cores
- 32 GB LPDDR5X RAM
- 4.7 GHz boost, 65–80 W TDP
- Likely debut at CES 2026
OneXPlayer X1 could debut at CES 2026
CES 2026 runs from January 6 to 9, and the OneXPlayer X1 seems timed to make a splash there. One-Netbook has used that window before to show off new models, and with Panther Lake now surfacing in benchmarks, the reveal feels imminent.
The handheld space is heating up fast, but OneXPlayer isn’t blinking. With bold memory specs, a new chip, and a unique GPU pick, this X1 model could offer a sharper edge in a sea of copycats. Now, it just needs to show what those numbers mean in real-world play.

