Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

You might want to double-check before buying laptops from this Chinese brand

Reports claim certain Chuwi laptops contain older processors despite marketing newer ones.

Add as a preferred source on Google
CHUWI CoreBook X Featured
CoreBook X / CHUWI

Independent testing has recently uncovered what it describes as a potential CPU mislabeling issue affecting multiple Chuwi laptops. In its latest report, Notebookcheck found that the Chuwi CoreBook Plus, which is marketed as using an AMD Ryzen 5 7430U, actually shipped with the older Ryzen 5 5500U processor instead.

What makes the situation more unusual is that the laptop’s packaging, product pages, BIOS, and even Windows system tools reportedly identify the chip as a Ryzen 5 7430U, making it difficult for buyers to detect the discrepancy without deeper inspection. The discovery has raised concerns about transparency in the budget laptop market, especially since this isn’t the first time such a mismatch has been reported.

What exactly is the CPU controversy about?

According to Notebookcheck’s investigation, the CoreBook Plus is actively marketed with the Ryzen 5 7430U, a newer Zen 3 processor launched in 2023. However, after purchasing and opening a retail unit, the reviewers discovered the laptop actually contained the Ryzen 5 5500U, an older Zen 2 chip released in 2021.

The difference may not sound huge on paper, but the newer processor has a higher boost clock and double the L3 cache (16 MB vs 8 MB), which can translate to better performance in certain workloads. In other words, buyers may believe they are getting a newer chip typically found in laptops priced €100–€200 higher, potentially making the system appear like a better bargain than it actually is. Even more surprising is the fact that the laptop’s firmware and software identifiers were configured so that system utilities still report the CPU as a Ryzen 5 7430U, masking the true hardware unless the device is physically opened.

Is this an isolated case or something bigger?

Unfortunately, the CoreBook Plus may not be the only device involved. Earlier testing found a similar issue with another model, the Chuwi CoreBook X, which was also advertised with a Ryzen 5 7430U but reportedly shipped with the same Ryzen 5 5500U chip instead. With two separate laptop models showing the same mismatch, investigators say the issue appears unlikely to be a simple labeling mistake.

Chuwi has reportedly responded to inquiries by saying it is investigating the matter internally. However, Notebookcheck says the company also repeatedly asked the publication to take down its earlier reports, warning of potential legal action due to alleged reputational damage, which ultimately prompted the outlet to dig deeper into the issue.

Recommended Videos

For consumers, the takeaway is fairly simple: always verify specs, the best you can. If a laptop deal looks unusually good, it might be worth taking a closer look.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
Windows 11 is testing a low-latency mode and it visibly speeds up app launch
Windows 11’s new performance trick lets your CPU go all out for a moment
Windows 11 Laptop

Even on powerful hardware, you have probably noticed that Windows 11 can feel less responsive than it should. Tiny delays in basic actions like opening the Start menu or navigating File Explorer can make the system feel heavier and less polished than rivals like macOS.

Microsoft appears to know this is an issue and may finally be working on a fix. After speeding up right-click menus and Quick Settings, improving File Explorer, and making broader under-the-hood changes, the company is now reportedly testing a new feature called Low Latency Profile to make Windows 11 feel more responsive overall.

Read more
Chuwi’s CoreBook Air wants to be the rare ultra-light Copilot+ laptop without an outrageous price
The CoreBook Air 226V's specs would be impressive from Lenovo or Dell; coming from Chuwi at $800, they're either a genuine breakthrough or a reminder that price isn't the only thing that matters when buying a laptop.
Chuwi new lightweight option.

Chuwi has never been the brand you associate with top-tier hardware: it built its name on budget laptops that punched above their weight at entry-level prices. 

The new CoreBook Air 226V is a deliberate step away from the brand’s comfort zone. It’s a sub-1kg Copilot+ PC built around Intel’s Lunar Lake processors, and at $800, it’s asking buyers to trust it with something that it has never before: a premium Windows laptop. 

Read more
Bots now account for over half of the internet traffic and they’re raising all kinds of hell
Humans are now the minority on the web, thanks to bots
Isometric Ai assistant and bubble speech, 3D illustration

While humans built the internet, actual people aren't the ones roaming the online space the most. A new report from Thales says bots accounted for more than 53% of all web traffic in 2025, up from 51% the previous year. Meanwhile, human activity has fallen by 47%, which means automated traffic has now become the dominant force online. And that's not even the bad news.

How AI is making the bot problem worse

Read more