- Mechrevo’s Yaoshi 18 Pro debuted at CES to great fanfare
- The laptop has an unusually large 18-inch screen for consumer devices
- Nvidia RTX 50 Series GPU handles graphics and AI tasks
Mechrevo quietly introduced a high-performance laptop at CES 2026 under the name Yaoshi 18 Pro, attracting limited attention despite making unusually bold hardware claims.
The device appeared with the Intel and Nvidia brands, suggesting a collaboration focused on high-performance computing rather than mainstream portability.
Its presence at the show was low-key, but specifications displayed on nearby signage immediately raised questions about accuracy and intent.
Yaoshi 18 Pro – big but unnoticed?
The most dominant visual feature is an 18-inch screen that anchors the physical identity of the system.
The Mechrevo booth hardware emphasized scale and immersion, using the phrase “Immersion, More Than Just Big” to describe the on-screen experience.
No resolution or refresh rate figures were visible, leaving the panel’s actual technical merit unclear despite the marketing emphasis on size.
An 18-inch format already places the device among the largest laptops currently in circulation on consumer markets.
The Yaoshi 18 Pro was labeled as running an Intel Core Ultra 300HX processor, a designation that Intel has not officially announced.
HX-class chips traditionally indicate high power limits and desktop-level ambitions, but the specific numbering suggests a generation that Intel has not publicly detailed.
Whether this reflects an internal roadmap reference or a display error remains up in the air.
Graphics branding was simpler, with repeated confirmation of an Nvidia GeForce RTX 50 Series laptop GPU.
Nvidia promotional cards referred to “RTX. It’s On,” reinforcing expectations for ray tracing, AI acceleration, and advanced compute workloads.
Another display card mentioned personal LLMs, involving local AI tasks rather than purely gaming scenarios.
At the event, the poster offered very limited information about the device itself.
Several icons suggested features related to cooling, performance tuning, and productivity, but there were no specifications, benchmarks, or measurable comparisons to support these claims.
At the time of writing, no information is available regarding pricing, launch times, or regional availability.
The Yaoshi 18 Pro appears to be part of a growing class of oversized laptops that trade mobility for raw computing power.
Uncertainty remains around which processor is listed. If the information is accurate, it would indicate an unusually early public appearance of unannounced material. If not, it probably reflects a simple but consequential typo that escaped attention.
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