China Takes the Supercomputer Crown: The LineShine Story

China Takes the Supercomputer Crown — The LineShine Story
Rendering exascale data…
2.198
Exaflop/s
13.79M
CPU cores
0 GPUs
all-domestic silicon
#1
on the TOP500
ISC 2026 · Hamburg · The 67th TOP500 List

For the first time since 2017, the world’s fastest supercomputer is Chinese — and it didn’t use a single GPU to get there.

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The Headline

A crown changes continents

On June 23, 2026, in a conference hall in Hamburg, the rankings that the high-performance computing world watches twice a year were rewritten. A machine almost nobody had heard of the week before — LineShine — appeared at the very top of the 67th TOP500 list, and in doing so ended a streak that had defined an era.

Installed at the National Supercomputing Centre in Shenzhen and built by the Shenzhen Cloud Computing Center, LineShine clocked 2.198 exaflops on the High Performance Linpack benchmark — roughly 2.2 quintillion calculations every second. That figure pushed past the United States’ reigning champion, El Capitan at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, which holds steady at 1.809 exaflops. It is the first time a China-based system has led the list since Sunway TaihuLight in 2017, and the symbolism was impossible to miss: the supercomputing crown had crossed an ocean.

The Machine

Built from homegrown silicon

What makes LineShine remarkable isn’t only its speed — it’s how it got there. Every leading supercomputer of the past decade has leaned on graphics processors, the same accelerators that power modern AI. LineShine threw that playbook out. It is the first system on the TOP500 to break two exaflops of sustained double-precision performance using CPUs only, with no GPUs anywhere in the rack.

LineShine · Linpack sustained

2.198 EF/s
Cores
13.79 million
Processor
304-core LX2
Clock
1.55 GHz
Interconnect
LingQi
Operating system
Kylin OS
Power draw
42.2 MW

The system is built on the custom Chinese “LingKun” platform: 13.79 million cores spread across 304-core LX2 processors running at 1.55 GHz, stitched together by a proprietary LingQi interconnect and running the domestic Kylin operating system. Its 2.198-exaflop result represents about 80 percent of a 2.736-exaflop theoretical peak — and it drew 42.2 megawatts to do it, for an efficiency of 52.07 gigaflops per watt.

That all-domestic design is the quiet story underneath the headline. China achieved this despite years of U.S. export controls aimed at cutting off access to the most advanced GPUs. By engineering around the embargo rather than through it — building a CPU-centric architecture on indigenous chips — Shenzhen’s engineers turned a constraint into a statement.

An entire architecture designed around the chips you’re allowed to have, not the ones you’re not.
The Standings

Five machines past the exascale line

LineShine’s debut did more than swap the name at the top. It lifted the number of systems sustaining more than one exaflop from four to five — and, for the first time, placed exascale machines on three continents at once: Asia, North America, and Europe.

LineShineChina 🇨🇳
2.198
El CapitanUnited States 🇺🇸
1.809
FrontierUnited States 🇺🇸
1.353
AuroraUnited States 🇺🇸
1.012
JUPITERGermany 🇩🇪
1.000

The United States still owns three of the five exascale systems — Frontier at Oak Ridge and Aurora at Argonne join El Capitan — while Germany’s JUPITER Booster, operated under the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking, sits at exactly one exaflop as Europe’s sole representative above the line. The depth of the American fleet is undiminished. But the single number everyone remembers, the one at rank No. 1, now belongs to Shenzhen.

By the Numbers

The figures that tell the tale

0
Exaflop/s on HPL
0
CPU cores
0
GPUs used
0
HPCG-Petaflop/s · No.1
0
Last Chinese No.1
0
Power draw

Raw Linpack speed is only one lens. LineShine also seized the top spot on the HPCG benchmark — a test built to reflect messy, data-intensive real-world workloads — with 22.00 HPCG-petaflops, ahead of El Capitan and Japan’s Fugaku. On the measures that reward sheer numerical muscle and irregular memory access, the new champion is convincing.

The Asterisk

A win with a caveat

For all its dominance on classic benchmarks, LineShine carries a meaningful footnote. The same CPU-only design that let it dodge the GPU embargo also leaves it comparatively weak at the workload that matters most in 2026: artificial intelligence.

On the mixed-precision HPL-MxP benchmark — the test that best mirrors AI training — LineShine lands only fourth, at 7.92 exaflops, a modest 3.6× speedup over its standard score. El Capitan keeps that crown at 16.7 exaflops. The CPU architecture has no dedicated low-precision accelerators to lean on.

In other words, China now holds the title for the fastest traditional supercomputer — the kind used for climate modeling, physics simulation, and engineering — while the United States retains the lead in the precise area driving the global tech race. The crown is real, but it is not the AI crown. Both facts can be true at once, and both are.

The Long Game

How we got here

2016–2017
China’s Sunway TaihuLight rules the TOP500, the last Chinese system to hold No. 1 — until now.
2018–2024
U.S. Department of Energy machines — Summit, Frontier, then El Capitan — trade the lead among themselves as export controls tighten.
2024
El Capitan debuts at Lawrence Livermore, breaking 1.8 exaflops and cementing American leadership.
June 2026
LineShine appears from nowhere at 2.198 exaflops on all-domestic silicon, reclaiming the crown for China.

The pattern beneath the timeline is a contest that no single technology path now controls. The June 2026 top ten spans custom Chinese processors, AMD-powered exascale machines, Intel’s Aurora, NVIDIA’s Grace Hopper systems, cloud-based clusters from Microsoft, and Japan’s Arm-based Fugaku. There is no longer one road to leadership-class computing — and that diversity is exactly why the lead can change hands so suddenly.

The Takeaway

What it really means

LineShine is, all at once, an engineering triumph, a geopolitical signal, and a reminder of how the supercomputing map is being redrawn. It proves that sanctions can reshape a strategy without stopping it, that a CPU-only machine can still touch the summit, and that the gap between the world’s computing superpowers is now measured in fractions of an exaflop rather than generations.

The next list arrives in November. The American fleet runs deep, new European and Italian systems are climbing, and the AI-optimized machines keep multiplying. For now, though, the fastest supercomputer on Earth answers to Shenzhen — and the race has never looked closer.

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