Intel's Panther Lake processors are starting to show up in shipping products, and One Netbook is among the first to deliver one in tablet form. The ONEXPLAYER Super V pairs an Intel Core Ultra 7 358H with its integrated Arc B390 GPU across a 35.6 cm (14-inch) OLED panel running at 2880 x 1800 and up to 120 Hz with variable refresh rate support. First previewed at CES in January, the 2-in-1 is now available from the ONEXPLAYER Store for $1,899 (€1,750).
The Core Ultra 7 358H is a 16-core chip with 12 graphics cores and a 50 TOPS NPU, and One Netbook has paired it with 48GB of LPDDR5x-8533 memory and a 1TB NVMe SSD. RAM is soldered, but storage is user-replaceable through an M.2 2280 PCIe 4.0 x4 slot. There is also a mini SSD card reader that supports removable storage at PCIe 4.0 speeds, plus a microSD 4.0 slot for cards up to 2TB. Connectivity is generous for a tablet: two USB4 Type-C ports, one USB 3.2 Type-A, HDMI 2.1, a 3.5mm jack, WiFi 7, and Bluetooth 5.2.
The OLED display hits 500 nits and supports pen input via the Microsoft Pen Protocol with 4096 levels of pressure sensitivity. Cooling comes from a vapor chamber paired with dual fans, and an 85.58 Wh battery keeps things running on the go. The whole package measures 314 x 208 x 12.5 mm (12.4 x 8.2 x 0.5 inches) at its thinnest point and weighs 1.3 kg (2.9 lbs) without the included detachable magnetic keyboard, which connects via pogo pins and features RGB backlighting and a full touchpad.
The Arc B390 integrated graphics should deliver performance in the neighborhood of entry-level discrete GPUs, making this a genuinely portable gaming machine rather than just a productivity slate with a kickstand. Intel's open-source graphics driver stack already supports Arc B390 Xe3 graphics at the component level, with Phoronix having benchmarked the chip on Linux 6.19 using Intel's open-source compute runtime, and Bazzite, the Fedora-based gaming Linux distribution, already documents support for several OneXPlayer handheld models alongside Intel Arc GPUs. Device-level Linux compatibility on the Super V itself will depend on the usual combination of community effort and firmware openness, but the component-level groundwork makes this an x86 slate worth watching for those inclined to experiment. Whether you want to run Steam on this or explore handheld-friendly Linux distributions, the combination of Panther Lake silicon, a high-refresh OLED, and a full suite of ports makes the Super V one of the more interesting x86 tablets to hit the market in a while.



