Nvidia (NVDA) Chief Executive Jensen Huang spent the third day of a four-day South Korea visit moving between two ends of the same bet: cars and video games. On June 7 he had lunch with Chung Eui-sun, executive chair of Hyundai Motor Group, Korea's largest automaker, at Woo Lae Oak, a Seoul Pyongyang cold-noodle restaurant, ahead of a scheduled visit to Hyundai's headquarters on June 8, according to Chosun Biz. Separately, he met the leaders of two Korean game makers at Seoul internet cafes, Korea Times reported.
For a portfolio manager, the question is whether the trip produces anything new or simply reaffirms deals already on the books. The most concrete near-term catalyst is a reported plan, in final-stage talks, for Nvidia and Hyundai to build a dedicated artificial-intelligence research-and-development hub in South Korea, per reporting circulated June 4. If signed during this visit, it would extend an existing relationship that already carries real money.
What is already committed
The baseline was set on October 31, 2025, in Gyeongju, when Hyundai Motor Group and Nvidia announced an AI factory powered by Nvidia Blackwell infrastructure. The two said they aimed to deploy 50,000 Nvidia Blackwell GPUs for AI model training, validation and deployment, part of an approximately $3 billion investment to build out physical-AI capacity in Korea, including an Nvidia AI Technology Center, a Hyundai Physical AI Application Center and regional data centers, according to the joint announcement carried on Hyundai's and Nvidia's newsrooms.
That commitment deepened on March 16, 2026, when Hyundai Motor, Kia and Nvidia expanded their autonomous-driving partnership. Hyundai Motor Group said it would adopt Nvidia DRIVE Hyperion, a reference architecture bundling compute, sensors and cameras, to build an integrated platform scalable from Level 2 to Level 4 autonomy, and would pursue Level 4 robotaxi work through Motional, its U.S.-based autonomous-driving joint venture, per the companies' joint release.
The gaming side of the same thesis
Huang's internet-cafe meetings target the other input to physical AI: simulation and graphics. He met Krafton Chairman Chang Byung-gyu, whose studio makes PUBG: Battlegrounds, alongside Krafton AI and PUBG executives, and separately Kim Taek-jin, chief executive of MMORPG developer NCsoft, Korea Times reported. The outlet noted Krafton's robotics venture Ludo Robotics and NCsoft's use of Nvidia rendering technology in its Aion 2 title, framing gaming studios as suppliers of the synthetic environments used to train humanoid robots and autonomous systems.
The symbolism is becoming a pattern. During Huang's October 2025 Korea trip, he dined with Chung and Samsung Electronics Chair Lee Jae-yong in a meeting Korean media dubbed the "Kkanbu" gathering, Chosun Biz noted. This visit, Chung did not join a separate Seoul barbecue gathering Huang held with the heads of SK, LG and Naver, according to Chosun Biz, opting instead for the one-on-one lunch.
What to watch
The immediate test is Huang's June 8 stop at Hyundai's headquarters: whether it yields a signed AI R&D hub agreement with a stated investment figure, or remains a framework. A confirmed dollar commitment would convert the relationship-building optics of this week into a measurable order, layered on the 50,000-GPU, roughly $3 billion base announced in October 2025. Absent that, the meetings extend an existing roadmap rather than add to it.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Figures are sourced from company announcements and news reports cited inline; readers should verify details against primary disclosures.



