NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang Celebrates Korean Gaming Culture at T1 Basecamp

by Shin Hye An Posted : June 6, 2026, 00:45Updated : June 6, 2026, 00:45
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang gifts a signed GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card to player Faker Lee Sang-hyeok at T1 Basecamp in Hongdae, Seoul, on June 5.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang gifts a signed GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card to player Faker Lee Sang-hyeok at T1 Basecamp in Hongdae, Seoul, on June 5. [Photo by An Shin-hye]

Jensen Huang, CEO of NVIDIA, arrived in Korea on June 5 and immediately visited a PC bang, expressing high regard for the country's gaming culture and esports.

Huang landed at Gimpo International Airport around 1 p.m. and headed to the T1 Basecamp PC bang in Hongdae, where he met with League of Legends esports team T1 players, including Faker (Lee Sang-hyeok), Doran (Choi Hyun-jun), Owner (Moon Hyun-jun), Phase (Kim Soo-hwan), and Keria (Ryu Min-seok). The T1 Basecamp is operated by T1.

According to T1 officials, the players were pleased to meet Huang despite their busy schedules during the 2026 LoL Champions Korea season.

Fans welcomed Huang with cheers as he interacted with them, taking photos and signing autographs.

Huang remarked, "The Korean gaming industry made GeForce a big bang." He expressed gratitude for the growth of NVIDIA alongside the popularity of gaming in Korea and the development of PC bang culture. He added, "Korea's gaming culture has brought GeForce to its current position, and this is entirely thanks to Korea."

He also stated, "Korea is the birthplace of esports. Korea created esports and the culture of watching esports." Huang emphasized, "Korea has held a special place in my heart for a long time and is very important to NVIDIA. Thank you for supporting us for so long. We are also your passionate fans."

On this occasion, Huang gifted Faker a signed GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card, which currently trades for over 4 million won. Huang described it as a "one-of-a-kind graphics card" and joked that it could be worth a million dollars.

During the event, Huang introduced NVIDIA's new PC superchip, the RTX Spark, which can handle complex software stacks like DirectX and OpenGL simultaneously and will support AI agents on PCs in the future. The RTX Spark is currently being developed for laptops, desktops, and workstations, with a planned release this fall.

Huang and Faker also hosted a fan event, giving away GeForce and RTX Spark vouchers to attendees.

Faker commented on the meeting with Huang, saying, "Graphics cards are very important to gamers. I believe we owe our success as gamers to NVIDIA's graphics cards, making this a very meaningful time."





* This article has been translated by AI.