So my SER8 finally arrived and I am very happy with it so far. I was really concerned about the wifi and bluetooth performance but I am pleased to find it actually works quite well. Getting max speeds on my internet wifi and also bluetooth is good enough.
I am looking to buy a Mini PC. Is anyone aware of any upcoming releases to wait for?
The nature of the problem is that I identify a Mini PC model, but it is no longer available with a particular processor (in the case of the GMKtec NucBox K7 Plus i5-13500h variant). SerMumble's spreadsheet has been most helpful, so thanks for that.
i recently bought an acemagician am06 (it arrives in two days) but I found that this model apparently has spyware pre-installed on it. I heard this can be solved by just reinstalling windows, but I wanted to ask for yall's opinions first before going forward
My options right now are: 1. cancelling the order and getting a mini pc from brand more trustworthy, or 2. reinstalling windows. I would do the second, but I'm not sure how to boot into the boot drive or install clean windows without a trace of malware remaining.
Looking for a box to run Linux Handbrake transcoding and the Minisforum UN1290 bubbled up. Most of the posts here downplay the reliability of these little boxes. Any one know if this one will last more than a few weeks?
I purchased this PC for my son for his birthday because he loves playing games. I wanted something small but powerful to fit in our home office. This is just right! It's tiny, but I was able to install Steam and games for him, and the main interface works just like any other computer. You can surf the web, stream videos, etc. Hoping that durability over time will also be just as satisfactory.
Getting a score of 1820 compared to global average of 3204 on Time Spy. Any thoughts why performance is so far below average? Graphics score 1598, CPU score 8680.
i've been looking into getting a new pc for gaming with a $600ish budget. i play hardly any aaa games and don't care for maxed-out graphics, but i'd like to play the last of us and have the textures actually load in. i've had my eye on a gmktec k6 but i'm not sure how reputable/reliable it is nor if it would suit my needs. any recommendations?
I'm looking for a minipc to be my new mediacenter behind my futur new TV (samsung S95D). The TV is 4K 120hz so i'm looking for a minipc which can do that.
I've search and the N100 can't go higher than 60hz and i found the guide of SerMumble and i found out that the beelink GTR7 does it but it cost 800€! my actual PCHT costed me only 400€.
I purchased an Atomman G7 PT and love the machine so far but wondering what people in the community will do with the default Red/Green lighting and artsy design on the side panel as its not everyones cup of tea. Ideally I want to have the machine on its side.
1) Obviously can disable it in BIO's, remove the transparent film/unplug the LED
2) Can get a custom print to replace the art but where would one get that done?
3) I was thinking adding more cooling to it with some super slim fans? possible?
4) Remove LED's + the magnetic cover and replace it with a magnetic mesh panel to increase airflow?
Beelink went extra crazy and there are 55 screws in this mini pc. It took 16 screws to access the RAM/SSD and another 24 screws to access the CPU. Most mini PC enclose their RAM/SSD with 5-10 screws and have under 20 screws in total.
Synthetic tests, temperatures, and graph comparisons between the GTi14 Ultra and SER8 are linked in the google sheets link below.
Generally, the GTi14 Ultra is behind the SER8 in performance and has higher temperatures. The difference isn't big enough to be felt during casual use but it is safe to say that buying the GTi14 Ultra should be for its features rather than raw performance because it is considerably more expensive than the SER8.
Average temperatures were good and better than a GTR7 Pro but not as amazing as the SER8 due to unusual max CPU temperature spikes, heat from the internal power supply, and smaller SSD heatsink. I opened the GTi14 Ultra to diagnose CPU thermal throttling reports from HWinfo64. It is possible hwinfo64 is having trouble reading the CPU temperature. Cleaning liquid metal was tedious but possible with paper towels and +90% isopropyl alcohol. I plan on lapping and repasting the large vapor chamber because I suspect it may not be flat and the 185H die is very long.
Features to note with the GTi14 Ultra:
finger print sensor
speakers
microphone
intel BE200 wifi 7 (finally a better wireless card than the AX200 wifi 6!!)
liquid metal, vapor chamber, and super mega 120x12mm 12V fan. The SER8 used a 105x12mm 12V fan and that was already very jumbo. These large fans are phenomenal.
pcie x16 slot limited to pcie gen 4 x8 bandwidth (very frustrating to have but cannot use without a dock). It's possible we are not seeing the GTi with an AMD processor due to a lack of pcie lanes.
145W very very small internal power supply so there is no external power brick. Weirdly, there is some thermal bleed where the PC case gets around 30C when sleeping or off. I connected the GTi14 ultra to its own switch so I could cut power completely.
SD card reader (underrated thing to include, very useful to me and my 3D printers and cameras)
rear audio jack for cleaner speaker wire management
dual 2.5GB lan
I tried talking to microsoft's copilot which was a funny novelty since copilot is too chatty. After a couple days, I stopped using it. I'm not in the habit of using speach apps like apple's Siri. Your experience may vary. The microphone and speaker were of mid quality, functional. I may not reinstall the microphone because it lacks an off switch.
The GTi14 Ultra is unexpectedly portable. It's larger than an intel NUC and Beelink SER6 but I did not have to worry about a power brick, speakers for audio, and logging in was a breeze with a fingerprint sensor. It works surprisingly well with a portable monitor.
The GTi14 Ultra is an engineering marvel and monstrous inside for better and worse.
Modern laptop computers have more processing power than ever, with many also offering features like long battery life, thin and light designs and… AI, I guess. And for the most part, laptops are versatile and powerful enough to serve as desktop replacements for most users. But there are a few areas where desktop hardware continues […]
In recent years, the best mini PCs have really bulked up to become modest yet genuinely viable gaming platforms. The Accelerated Processing Units (APUs) in these tiny machines are made for laptops. They comprise a CPU running at a prudent wattage and an Integrated Graphics Processor (iGPU) to handle games and video.
For years such chips weren't really ideal for gaming, but when AMD launched the Radeon 780M iGPU, it raised the bar. It's the graphics silicon at the heart of the best gaming handhelds and this little beast all but guarantees around 30 fps and better at 1080p, in modern games at medium detail settings. Running indies and older titles, you'll enjoy still higher frame rates.
Augmenting the iGPU with a discrete laptop GPU is the next step up, and you'll find two such machines in this group test. For its all-round performance, with a discrete RX 7600M XT at its heart, the Minisforum AtomMan G7 PT gets my vote as the best mini PC. Naturally this raises the cost, and there's no question that building your own PC gets you more bang for the same bucks, but this level of compactness can't be matched by going DIY. On the cheaper side, however, the Venus UM970 Pro gets the nod as the best budget mini PC.
If your chief requirements are top frame rates and detail settings beyond 1440p for the lowest outlay, you are better off self-building. But if you're after a tiny, off-the-peg PC with awesome everyday computing power and 1080p to 1440p gaming capabilities, well, you've come to the right place.
This is PC Gamer, so the best mini PC needs to be able to do that, and with the discrete RX 7600M XT inside it, the AtomMan G7 PT is absolutely capable of delivering on that front. Its eight-core, 16-thread Zen 4 chip is also equally capable of any productivity goodness, too.
Pick the barebones unit, source your own RAM and storage, and you'll have a cheap, powerful mini PC for both gaming and any kind of other PC work you might care to throw its way. It may be small but it's got great potential and genuinely impressive cooling at its heart as well.
Good lord, that's a lot of money. If you're after a mini PC with the best gaming performance, this is absolutely the one you will covet, but you will need to be prepared to part with a significant amount of cash to be able to call this sleek little gaming beast your own.
It's actually pretty stunning how much performance you can pull from a PC so damned small. The Geekom AX8 Pro is incredibly dinky and yet that AMD processor at its heart still delivers some of the best iGPU gaming performance without sounding like a jet turbine.
With its NES-aping design, the Retro Mini AM02 is absolutely the cutest mini PC around. But that beauty is not only skin-deep because inside lurks the excellent AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS APU, and a level of performance customisation that few other machines are able to offer.
APU: AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX | GPU: Radeon RX 7600M XT | Memory: Up to 96 GB DDR5-5200 | Storage: 1x PCIe 5.0, 1x PCIe 4.0 M.2 | Wireless networking: Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.3 | I/O Front: 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C, 3.5mm combo jack | I/O Rear: 1x HDMI 2.0, 1x DisplayPort 2.0, 3x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C, 2.5G LAN, 3.5mm audio and mic jacks
Fabulous 1080p gaming
Abundant CPU power
Cool, quiet, and competent
Some games are a stretch at 1440p
Doesn't handle ray tracing well
Buy if...
✅ You demand power: The Ryzen 9 7945HX is a high-end, desktop-pummelling beast.
✅ You're happy at 1080p: The Radeon RX 7600M excels at full HD.
Don't buy if...
❌ You want an upgrade path: The CPU and GPU are soldered in and not replaceable.
❌ You want a zero-effort setup: The G7 PT ships barebones, so bring your own RAM, M.2 storage, and Windows license.
The bottom line
🕹️ The Minisforum AtomMan G7 PT is probably the most PC Gamer of all the mini PCs we've tested. It comes as a barebones unit, giving you scope to pick your own storage, OS, and memory, giving you fantastic config options from a price and personalisation perspective. It also packs a discrete GPU giving you serious 1080p gaming chops in a supremely small form factor.
Being more than capable of proper 1080p gaming performance and practically anything else you might want to do, the Minisforum AtomMan G7 PT is the best mini PC around. Housed in a compact chassis and mounted in its vertical stand, the AtomMan G7 PT is larger than your average mini pc, but still diminutive in terms of desktop footprint. Chances are, if you're in the market for a mini pc for gaming, then space is a factor, and this wee beasty takes up very little.
LEDs in the right-hand side of the chassis illuminate the logo for the Taiwanese fantasy IP Legend of Ashoka, but if you're not a fan, you can easily dip into the BIOS and turn those LEDs off. With this done, the chassis looks relatively clean, functional and understated in matte black.
The G7 PT represents a performance-leap from regular mini pcs as it comes with a discrete midrange laptop GPU, in the form of AMD's Radeon RX 7600M XT. With 2048 shader units, 32 CUs, a memory bus of 128 MB, a clock speed of 2,600 MHz and 8 GB of dedicated VRAM, It's a strong 1080p performer. It can run games at 1440p, but be prepared to notch down some graphics settings to keep frame rates smooth. In all honesty, 2560 x 1440 is more the playground of NVIDIA's RTX 4070 Mobile, a costlier and more performant mobile GPU, and one that you'll find in the hyper-expensive Asus ROG NUC 970.
Processing duties are handled by the Ryzen 9 7945HX. Running at a default TDP of just 65 W, it's a bloody monster, featuring 16 cores, 32 execution-threads and a turbo-clock speed of 5.4 GHz. And while it drives games fantastically, it's geared to do way more. Tasks such as video rendering are water off a duck's back to the 7945HX, and it puts many desktop processors to shame. You can even bump the TDP up to 85 W by hitting the turbo button on the G7 PT's front-panel, though you'll feel the benefit of that more in productivity tasks, less so in gaming.
You might think this compelling combo of components would make the G7 PT screeching-hot and noisy, but that couldn't be further from the truth. Minisforum's proprietary Cold Wave cooling tech is fantastic. It tames heat, tightly manages airflow, keeps fan noise to a minimum, and dedicates supplementary cooling to the RAM and M.2 drives.
When it comes to gaming, 1080p is where the G7 PT shines. You can expect a solid 60+ fps in most modern titles, with detail settings around the ultra mark, and you'll see some games shoot way past 100 fps. We had A Plague Tale: Requiem, set to 1080p Ultra, running at 76 fps. Doom Eternal, at 1080p and Ultra Nightmare settings, blazes along at 172 fps. One feature you shouldn't touch, though, is ray tracing, which slays the frame rate at any resolution; the RX 7600M XT just isn't cut out for it.
But that's a minor quibble. Paired with a quality, high-refresh 1080p monitor, the AtomMan G7 PT is a great machine for the price. Just bear in mind that as a barebones purchase, so you'll need to pick up your own DDR5 RAM, M.2 storage drive and Windows key.
✅ You want compact performance: The Venus UM790 Pro runs one of AMD's best APUs at full speed, with great heat management and minimal noise.
✅ You're on a budget: The barebones option is competitively priced, and you'll save on RAM and storage costs by shopping around.
Don't buy if...
❌ You're a high-res gamer: More demanding modern games are playable at 1080p with medium settings, but push beyond that and it'll struggle.
❌ You want a holistic upgrade path: Like many mini PCs, the UM790 Pro's APU is soldered in and non-upgradeable.
The bottom line
🕹️ The Minisforum Venus UM970 Pro is an affordable, performant little machine. It's capable of impressive 1080p gaming if you're prepared to hit medium settings, and will do it all unobtrusively, too.
When it comes to mini PCs, at PC Gamer we're looking for machines which can run games comfortably at 1080p. The Minisforum Venus UM790 Pro is the best budget mini PC and represents one of the most affordable options to meet this gaming threshold.
The APU at the heart of things is AMD's Ryzen 9 7940HS. It's a fantastic chip, wielding eight cores and 16 threads which can hit a turbo clock speed of 5.2 GHz, and folds the mighty little Radeon 780M into its design. It has since been superseded by the newer Ryzen 9 8945HS, but you won't see a generational shift in performance between the two.
Architecturally these two chips are nigh-on identical, but as a newer chip, the 8945HS drives up the price of machines which carry it. That's a premium which offers marginal performance benefits. The bottom line is that the UM790 Pro offers a better price-performance ratio, so you can be confident you're not losing out by opting for this ever-so-slightly older CPU. The Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 has recently been launched in laptops, but we've yet to see that chip, with its 890M iGPU being made available in any mini PCs, and they certainly won't come cheap.
The UM790 pro will happily run most modern games past the playable 30 fps+ mark at 1080p and default medium settings, and can go higher with extra detail down-tweaks. Forza Motorsport is smooth at 47 fps, Cyberpunk 2077 sees 48 fps, and Warhammer 3's battles hit around the 42 fps mark. At the same settings in indies and older, less demanding titles, things ramp up most agreeably, with Stray running at a comfortable 45-60 fps, Soulstone Survivors ranging from 45-90 fps, and Doom Eternal seeing 75-95 fps.
While you can pick up the UM790 Pro from Amazon (it's always worth shopping around for the best price), it can be bought direct from Minisforum, and there's a range of price options, from the barebones basic kit to various preloaded configurations of RAM and M.2 storage. We always say go barebones and source the RAM and storage yourself, so figure on adding around 130-150 bucks to the bill for 32GB DDR5-5600 plus a 1TB M.2 drive, and possibly less if you catch some components at sale prices.
Popping the UM790 Pro open to install your parts is easy, though not the most elegant process. Four screws on the underside hold the upper shell to the component-tray, but these are hidden beneath the unit's four glued-on rubber feet. So getting at them involves tugging the feet off and breaking the rubber seal; it's worth putting another dab of glue on them when you put it back together.
There are two TDP settings in the BIOS which run the APU at different wattages; Balanced runs it at 54 W, while Performance bumps this up to 56 W. The performance difference is negligible in practice, though 56 W does run the chip a little hotter, and the cooling solution a little louder. Not that the latter is a worry though, the UM790 Pro runs cool and quiet, and in Balanced mode, it's totally unobtrusive.
All in all then, a lovely little piece of engineering. If you're looking for an inexpensive yet performant mini PC with a corking iGPU, it's our budget-best pick.
✅ Money's no object: If you want a performant mini gaming PC that delivers at 1440p and hang the cost, the ROG NUC is for you.
✅ You're not a fan of jiggling with a PC's innards: Not everyone wants to get elbow deep into their PC case, so if you just want a plug and play PC, here it is.
Don't buy if...
❌ You value value or an upgrade path: This is not a budget-friendly machine with future CPU or GPU upgrade potential.
The bottom line
🕹️ The price tag of the Asus ROG NUC 970 is absolutely prohibitive, but if you want the absolute fastest mini PC for gaming around, then there's nothing that can come close to the Asus mini beast in that regard.
Like the AtomMan G7 PT, the ROG NUC from Asus packs a discrete GPU, which pushes it to the larger end of the scale for a mini pc, but it's the most powerful graphics silicon you'll find in such a small chassis, making the Asus ROG NUC 970 the best mini PC for gaming. Just don't ask how much it costs... We still class these machines as mini pcs, as they're wilfully compact and powered by mobile computing components. The ROG NUC combines some excellent choices in this regard.
Geared towards high-end laptops, the Intel Core Ultra 9 185H CPU offers a mix of efficient, ultra-efficient and performance cores, with the purpose of drawing reduced wattages in times of low demand and ramping them up when games and apps require it to. For gaming though, it's the six multithreading performance cores, which cap out at 5.1 GHz, which we're most interested in. As mobile components go, it offers competitive performance with AMD's APU, and while Intel's own top 14th-gen Core i7 and i9 mobile chips outrun it in terms of core-count and raw speed, they also draw very high wattages and generate a lot of heat. This makes the Core Ultra 9 an altogether more elegant solution for a compact machine such as this.
The ROG NUC 970 pairs this with NVIDIA's RTX 4070 Mobile GPU, which features 4608 shader-units running at a boost clock of 1,695 MHz and has 8 GB dedicated VRAM to play with. While it doesn't share the same vital statistics and grunt as its desktop namesake, it's still a solid GPU, comfortably outperforming the RX 7600M XT in the Minisforum AtomMan G7 PT, pushing the ROG NUC's capabilities into genuine 1440p territory.
It also handles ray tracing well, and as an RTX 40-series RTX card it benefits from DLSS and Frame Gen, in games which support them. Hitting 76 fps in Cyberpunk 2077 at 1440p, using the Ray Tracing Ultra preset with DLSS and Frame Gen enabled, ain't to be sniffed at. Neither is a solid average of 72 fps in Helldivers, at 1440p with top detail settings.
It can get a bit blowy under load, but fortunately there are three performance settings in the preinstalled Asus Armory Crate app which raise or lower the TDP and the maximum fan speed. We found that setting it to Silent mode resulted in the loss of only one or two fps, which is a great trade-off for unobtrusive operation.
The only downside is the RRP. For its asking price of two grand, you can build a system with the Ryzen 7 7800X3D, an RTX 4080 Super and all the trimmings, in a small form-factor chassis. This will absolutely demolish games at 1440p and run them comfortably at 4K. In this context, the Asus ROG NUC is objectively not a bargain, or even particularly good value. But if you've money to spare, you're disinclined to self-build, and you want a super-compact machine with solid performance on a 1440p panel, you'll be pleased with what the ROG NUC has to offer.
✅ You demand the dinkiest: It's tiny. You could literally slip this thing in the back pocket of your jeans.
✅ You want great performance at 1080p: An excellent all-rounder with power enough for gaming at 1920x1080
Don't buy if...
❌ You're on a budget: The price tag is just shy of a grand, and there's no barebones option.
❌ You want a silent performer: With a powerful APU in a tiny case, the fan needs to hustle.
The bottom line
🕹️ Without doubt, the smallest mini PC we've used, that we would want to use, the Geekom AX8 Pro may not be super cheap, but it is an incredibly impressive feat of micro machine engineering.
In a marketplace full of dinky PCs, the AX8 Pro from Geekom is the dinkiest. Measuring just 11.1cm x 11.7cm x 3.8cm, and housed in a cool, light-blue aluminium chassis, it's crisp and visually appealing. It also has has a reassuring mass and sense of density about it, which speaks to a weighty cooling solution and closely-packed internal components.
Armed with AMD's Ryzen 9 8945HS, which features 8 cores, 16 threads and a turbo-max of 5.2 GHz, it's a quick and capable machine, and utilises the Radeon 780M for gaming and video tasks. Out of the box, its CPU is set to the highest of the BIOS' three performance modes, which are Silent (51 W TDP), Normal (59 W TDP) and Performance (65 W TDP).
This is pretty much overdrive for this CPU, giving the AX8 Pro a small edge in frame rates over other Radeon 780M-equipped APUs, but it also sees CPU temperatures sitting in the low-90s Celsius under heavy load. This is still a comfortable distance from its max operating temperature of 100 °C, but to keep it steady, the cooling system has to work hard. This results in a noisier box, though it's the passage of air you hear; there's no high-pitched coil-whine, which is a blessing. Heading into the BIOS and knocking the TDP back to its 59 W Normal mode reduces noise and heat significantly, and it barely affects the machine's gaming performance, so that's our recommendation for day-to-day operation.
It's highly competent with indie games at 1080p and medium settings, and we tested a range of titles including Subnautica (55-75 fps), Stray (52-75 fps), Soulstone Survivors (80-120 fps) and finished up with some good old Doom Eternal (70-80 fps).
It outperforms other 780M-wielding machines by a small amount, and offers a competent and playable experience at 1080p with medium presets in more demanding modern games too. Total War: Warhammer III hits 42 and 33 fps in battle and campaign respectively, while Forza runs at a very smooth 46 fps. Cyberpunk even breaks the half-century with 51 fps.
In short, it's a great little box, with the emphasis very much on little. The only downside is the price. There's a cheaper version of the AX8 available which drops the M.2 storage from 2TB to 1TB, keeps the same 32GB DDR5-5600, and replaces the Ryzen 9 8945HS with the Ryzen 7 8845HS. This is a very minor downgrade; the chips have with the same core/thread count and iGPU, with the 8845HS' turbo clock speed just 100 MHz slower. The full-fat 8945HS brushes a grand in price. For the same outlay, you can pick up Minisforum's discrete-GPU-packing AtomMan G7 PT barebones. And there's no Barebones option at all for the AX8 Pro.
If your priority is pure 1080p performance and size is secondary, there are better-performing machines for your needs than this delightful little device. But if you want the smallest, most svelte little square of agile computing, and the aforementioned benchmarks meet your needs, it's an excellent choice.
APU: AMD Ryzen 7840HS | GPU: Radeon 780M | Memory: Up to 64 GB DDR5-5600 | Storage: Up to 1 TB M.2 SSD | Wireless networking: Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3 | I/O Front: 1x USB4 Type-C, 2x USB-A 3.2, 1x 3.5 mm audio | I/O Rear: 2x USB-A 2.0, 1x DP1.4, 1x HDMI 2.0, 1x 1 Gb LAN, 1x 2.5 Gb LAN, 1x USB-C PD port
Lovely design
Tweakable performance
A natural home for emulators and indies
Doesn't get the very best out of its APU
Proprietary software is a little clunky with keyboard and mouse
Buy if...
✅ You want to build a gorgeous, TV-friendly emulation station: I mean, look at it. How cute is that wee thing?
✅ You play a lot of indies, and the odd heftier title: The AMD CPU, with its powerful integrated GPU, are perfectly capable of playing both indie classics and modern games at a decent pace.
Don't buy if...
❌ You want the most powerful mini PC there is: There are certainly micro machines that get more out of very similar silicon.
❌ You're looking for completely silent operation: It can definitely get a little 'chatty' when its fans crank up should you start making that AMD CPU run a little harder.
The bottom line
🕹️ Just look at it. Just look at it! The Ayaneo Retro Mini AM02 has been designed to look good, and it absolutely does, but it's also got the power to impress inside, too. And with the AyaSpace software a level of granularity to its configuration few can deliver.
I've never seen a PC elicit so many wide-eyed exclamations of delight. For the Retro Mini AM02, handheld specialist Ayaneo has gone to town on the retro styling, and one glance at its charming exterior is all it takes to make you go “ooh!”
It's a gunmetal-grey homage to the original Nintendo Entertainment System, complete with a tidy front-flap which conceals USB and headphone ports, and a dinky touchscreen on top. This displays detailed system info and enables you to switch between TDP presets, with the future potential for visual customisation. It adds to the neat looks, and once you have it set up, the whole machine pleases by simply being there.
Its beauty isn't just skin-deep, as the Retro Mini AM02 is built around AMD's Ryzen 7 7840HS, and gets its kicks with the Radeon 780M. This puts it in same 1080p league as competing machines, with one caveat.
While the 7840HS generally runs at TDPs between 35-54 W, Ayaneo limits this to 47 W, which results in a top turbo clock speed of 4.7 GHz, rather than the chip's theoretical maximum of 5.1 GHz. It's no great loss to be fair, and set against similar APUs in other machines, it only drops one or two fps in more demanding and heavyweight games. otherwise it's pretty much identical in performance to other APUs running the Radeon 780M.
What sets it apart from similarly-specced mini PCs is a unique level of out-of-the-box tweakability. The Retro Mini AM02 ships with Ayaspace 2.0 preinstalled, which is the principle interface for Ayaneo's handheld gaming PCs. It runs at Windows boot, bundling all your installed games into an easy-access single library, and offers tons of power and speed customisation options.
Under Ayaspace's performance tab, you can switch between three power presets which alter the TDP and CPU/GPU clock speeds for different demands. You can also set up your own presets, and there's a ton of BIOS-level tweakers to play with, including the APU's TDP limit, sliders for CPU and iGPU clock speeds, a CPU turbo toggle, a general power-policy setting, and automatic or custom fan-curves for the CPU cooler. With some light tinkering, we had the CPU and iGPU running at their max permissible speeds, with a fan-curve managing heat generation effectively and fairly quietly.
While you can totally use the Retro Mini AM02 as a desktop machine, it's equally at home under the TV, set up as an emulator to run retro games. The gamepad-friendly Ayaspace UI can be set to run fullscreen at boot, so it makes a lot of sense as a console and media centre, although you'll want to keep the output resolution at 1080p for native PC gaming.
With a quality IO selection including HDMI 2.0 and DisplayPort 1.4, WiFi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3 and plenty of USB ports, the whole kit is well-appointed. And while it can't quite run its APU at full throttle, there's little else to criticise about the Retro Mini AM02, and a lot to love.
We have a comprehensive test suite which we put our mini PCs through in order to gauge how effective they are. For a start, we want to know how good they are at gaming—this is PC Gamer, after all. For that we run them through 3DMark Time Spy to get an overall picture of relative performance, but then also through Forza Motorsport, for arcade performance; Total War: Warhammer 3, for balanced CPU and GPU-centric gaming; Homeworld 3, for CPU-focused strategy gaming; and finally Cyberpunk 2077 for the FPS fun-times.
We test those games at 1080p medium settings to give a good idea of how they will perform at the sort of levels that a standard gamer would want to use. For machines which have discrete GPUs inside them, however, we will also test at 1440p and at higher settings to see how far we can push them. We will also test some more PC games, such as Helldivers 2, Dead Space, Plague Tale: Requiem, and Doom Eternal.
We also test the CPU performance, because these machines also need to be good at general productivity tasks, too. So we run them through Blender and Cinebench to get an idea of their rendering performance.
Throughout all of this testing we will measure the temperature and power draw of each unit, and will perform more subjective acoustic testing as well.
Also tested
Minisforum AtomMan X7 Ti | Core Ultra 9 185H | Intel Arc GPU
The AtomMan X7 Ti is a small-footprint, high-quality PC with cutting-edge specs. It runs indies and older titles just great at 1080p, but throw anything more challenging at it and you can expect variable results. PC Gamer score: 82%
Whether a mini PC is worth buying for you really depends on what it is you're after. If you don't have the space for a desktop PC, but specifically want a machine that stays in one place—i.e. not a laptop—to go under your TV, for example, a mini PC is the perfect machine. They have genuine PC performance, and now that doesn't just mean for office productivity tasks—such as video editing and photoshop—but the latest components can also deliver genuine gaming performance, too.
What is the disadvantage of a mini PC?
The disadvantage of a mini PC is that they have much less upgradeability than a small form factor PC. You will generally be unable to change the processor at its heart, and if there's a discrete GPU it will be a laptop-class chip and won't be upgradeable, either.
Do mini PCs overheat easily?
This used to be a problem for some mini PCs, but part of our testing methodology and our criteria for inclusion as one of the best mini PCs is that they have to have adequate cooling. And that doesn't just mean the ability to run their components under heavy loads, but also to be able to do it quietly, too.
Are mini PCs bad for gaming?
While your mini PCs are never going to be able to deliver the same level of gaming performance as a full desktop gaming PC, they are nevertheless now fitted with the sort of components which are able to deliver proper 1080p frame rates in even the latest games. You might need to be a little more careful about what settings you use—for example, using medium settings as opposed to high or ultra—but you will still be able to get a great gaming experience in most modern games. Recent mini PCs use the same sort of components you'll find in the best gaming handheld PCs, and some even come with the GPUs you'll find in a modern gaming laptop.
Hello everyone, this is my first post in this community. I am wondering whether to get a BMAX B8 Plus with 24 Gb of LPPDR5 4400MHz or a MINISFORUM NAB6 Lite with 32 GB of DDR4 3200MHz, I mainly use the computer for programming in VS code, PyCharm and data science with Jupyter and PowerBI with occasional Linux VM machines. N.B: My budget is 400 euros maximum. Thank you in advance.
I've been eyeing the VIA Artigo A5000 for a while now and I'm torn. On one hand, the specs look promising for such a small form factor. MediaTek Genio 700, decent RAM and storage options - it seems like a solid little machine for light tasks, media consumption, and even some light productivity.
But then I wonder, is it really worth the price? Has anyone here actually gotten their hands on one? How's the performance in real-world use? Is it as snappy as the specs suggest? And what about thermals? I'm worried it might turn into a little space heater given its size.
Also, I'm curious about the software side of things. How's the OS experience? Any bloatware? And how's the upgradeability? Can I easily swap out the storage or RAM if needed?
I'd love to hear your thoughts and experiences with the Artigo A5000. Any tips or advice would be greatly appreciated!
I currently have this model of PC(ignore the GE I have a G model) and I originally wanted to upgrade to a super powerful mini Pc but have been significantly set back in funds. I am now looking at this 6600. Im assuming the cpu jump is pretty decent but how is the vega 11 integrated graphics to the rdna based gpu integrated graphics of the 6600h? I would primarily be using this PC for emulation up to PS2 and GameCube. Certain games on the 2400g would choke even at close to native resolution in certain spots. Could I avoid that?
It said there was a column for "displayport alt mode and data", but it doesn't seem to be there. Was it in a previous version, but dropped for the latest? Is it actually called something else? I couldn't find a column with a related name either.
I'm looking for a minipc with this capability, preferably one with low power requirements that could be portable, for some light computing on something like nreal glasses. Wondering if something like that exists, or if finding one is hard enough that it'd be preferable to just get an adapter for that.
I bought some smaller screwdrivers, thermal paste and some singer machine oil, but I can't seem to get the fan off and I can't see more than 2 screws, it's almost as if it's been glued on. I can't unplug it either, the plug won't pull out and I don't want to force it.
I'm going to upgrade my UM790Pro to 64gb, and am having trouble finding a compatibility list. There's nothing on Minisforum's website listing tested brands or modules. Most memory vendor sites have a memory compatibility selector, but none of the major players list Minisforum as a known system manufacturer.
Hi guy's is anyone able from this pic to tell me what Beelink model is this one? Would like to find out what the specs are for this exact model. I can see is a Ser-5 but if i try to google the full code doesn't find anything.
Thanks in advance to anyone who's able to help me out!
Hello! Any help would be tremendously appreciated!!
I am on the lookout for a good PC set up as I am majoring in Cyber-Security. I am currently going to use my sisters laptop due to having a Chromebook for the time being, but I would like to get one so I don't have to use hers.
I was looking at GEEKOM's Mini IT13 Mini PC 13th Gen Intel Core (see link below, if needed). It looks like it is giving me 2 options: 1) i7-13620H 32GB RAM+1TB SSD & 2) i9-13900H 32GN RAM+2TB SSD. I am currently leaning towards the 2nd option but I would like to know if I could run all my assignments through this Mini PC?
Hey, I’m currently looking to buy my first PC to help with my postgraduate studies and I’m not sure what I should be looking for. Ideally I want to stick to a mini PC no more than £200. I see on Amazon that the N95 DreamQuest Mini Desktop with Windows 11, 512GB Disk Size, with 16GB RAM is on sale at the moment.
However, I can’t really find too much about this brand, has anyone bought from them? Is it worth it? Also would be happy for people to point me elsewhere
We're big fans of the Lenovo Legion Go. It's a cracker of a gaming handheld, with a fantastic screen, detachable Switch-like controllers and an AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme APU that's capable of some great handheld gaming on the move.
About that last bit: it's rather, how shall we say, large, and as a result not the most portable of handhelds. However, there have been whispers in dark corridors that Lenovo may have been cooking up a smaller, 'Lite' version of the substantial device, and some cryptic copy on Lenovo's own website may have given the game away.
While the current Lenovo Legion Go has an 8.8-inch screen, some (now deleted) text on its product page reportedly mentioned that the device "comes with a 7-inch or 8-inch display" (via Videocardz). Not only that but there was also a reference to the inclusion of an HDMI port (which the current version lacks) and a cooling system with dual fans.
Yep, you guessed it, the current Legion Go only has one. One solitary spinning fan. So what's going on here then?
Well, the first eyebrow raiser here is the reference to both a 7-inch or 8-inch display. That does certainly suggest two models, one smaller than the other, although the fact that the current Legion Go's display is 8.8 inches makes the mention of an 8-inch unit particularly mystifying.
Similarly, the dual fan reference is just plain odd. While a smaller device would almost certainly have to change up the cooling system, cramming two fans into a smaller chassis strikes as an unusual approach to a more compact design.
So, are we looking at not just a reference to the Legion Go Lite, but potentially the upcoming Lenovo Legion Go 2? It's difficult to say, and let's face it—what could really be going on here is the result of an intern being let loose with some copy on the product page and getting the specifications all kinds of wrong.
Still, a smaller Legion Go does make all kinds of sense. While the 8.8-inch display is a glorious thing to behold on the current model, we found that its 2560 x 1600 resolution was essentially overkill for the frames the APU could push to it. Dropping down to 1200p was a much more pleasant experience, although there's an image quality trade-off to be made.
Shrinking the screen down makes that much less of an issue, while also reducing our primary critique—in its current form, the Legion Go is pretty big and cumbersome. So much so, in fact, that while we rate it as our top pick for big screen handhelds in our best handheld gaming PC guide, it's with the caveat that the Legion Go is the sort of device that's best used at home, rather than out and about on your daily travels.
A smaller, potentially lighter handheld would be a very smart move to address those concerns. As for the hardware inside, we're still left with best guesses at this point. Probably the AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme, again, or perhaps the regular Z1? Maybe even something Strix Point? There's also Lunar Lake to consider, for a wild card (and potentially very performant) option. That's if it's released in time, of course.
All I know is this: I've desired a Legion Go since the first time I saw one, and a smaller, neater version with those trick controllers strikes me as a very desirable device indeed. Time will tell whether this is simply an erroneous bit of copy, or a strong hint towards Lenovo handhelds yet to come.
this is an update on a reddit post i made a few days ago. I got a trigkey pc with a ryzen 7 7735hs with 32 gb of ddr5 4800mhz ram and a 500gb ssd. So far its been amazing. I expected the 4k 144hz advertisement to be fake. 4k 144hz output does work with display port.
this is an update on a reddit post i made a few days ago. I got a trigkey pc with a ryzen 7 7735hs with 32 gb of ddr5 4800mhz ram and a 500gb ssd. So far its been amazing. I expected the 4k 144hz advertisement to be fake. 4k 144hz output does work with display port.
The game performance has been really good. It is where i expect it to be for a 680m. In overwatch, low graphics with no resolution scaling 1080p will net 100-120 fps in an actual match. The fps will be closer to 144 in training mode. Intense effects that take up the screen will drop the fps to 80. The fan is loud for the amount of cooling its doing. The exhaust doesn't feel very hot either so it's best to reduce the fan speed if you don't wear headphones. I wear headphones so im not going to touch the fan speeds.
There was one annoying problem. The windows package installer wasn't working properly so i couldn't install certain apps like Epic Games Launcher. The fix that worked for me was upgrading from windows 22H2 to 23H2 while selecting the repair option. Also, the headphone jack lacks any power. So headphones will be very quiet if connected to its front aux. So far this pc is exactly what i expect it to be. I got this to use as a multipurpose pc. My laptop can't output 4k 60hz even. It doesn't have thunderbolt either so i dont want to be plugging in all the cables every time i take it somewhere. I won't be using this to play newer games, maybe older pc games.
I got this for 350 dollars amazon. The sales tax was included in the price. Overall I'm super satisfied.
Are there any mini PCs in the same price range as the steam deck with the same performance? I’m setting up a second gaming area for with my kids and instead of having them borrow my deck and buying a second dock I’d prefer to just have a mini PC there with windows
I’m planning on getting a mini PC since my low spec MacBook Pro 2016 is starting to struggle, and can no longer run 4k videos (surprisingly, games are okay: I’m able to run GTA V on an external SSD running Windows 11 perfectly fine, but I thought I’d treat myself to an upgrade regardless)
I found a used ASUS Ryzen 7 4700U for a decent price (approx £240). It’s got a 240GB SSD, which I’ll probably upgrade if it’s easy to do so
How good is this mini PC for handling 4K video (which my MacBook now struggles to do, idk why) and play games like GTA V, Euro Truck Sim 2 etc
I currently run Windows off of a Samsung T7 SSD on my MacBook, and it works, but a mini PC does seem like a cleaner & more efficient solution (assuming this model can run games properly)
I’m also open to other suggestions! But ideally I do not want to spend more than £250+, as I do also plan on replacing my MacBook soon to be my daily driver
I just got it today. It will turn on, but wont display video, even after switching inputs and cords. Could it be an issue with the RAM not being seated or something else? Suggestions? I can post pictures too if that helps.
Hi just joined the community. I have a tough question and am hoping someone can help please. Just purchased the following BOSGAME Gaming Mini PC M1, AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS Mini Computers built-in Speaker, Radeon 780M Graphics, 32GB Dual Channel DDR5,1TB PCIe4.0 NVMe SSD, Dual Nic, 2*USB 4.0+HDMI+DP, Love the pc quiet keeps cool quick etc. Now there is just one issue . My audio interface right hand speaker channel for some reason keeps giving a sort of interference sound - like a crackling. On the headphones output of the interface (Blacklion revolution 2 ) is perfect, just the problem with the right channel speaker. I have tried the audio interface on my other windows 10 pro pc and its ok. Also I have another fairly pro audio interface and exactly the same problem occurs . I have spoken to their support at Bosgamw but they just said I can disable the bleep if I want which is not the issue at all As I will be using this to record on a DAW and monitor through my speakers if I can’t sort it I’ll have to send it back which would be so sad as it’s aa great machine and at £440 even I could afford it! Hope this makes sense and if you can help it would be massively appreciated Thanks Paul from Wales UK
There's a dozen or so of them on Amazon. I got this one. NewHail Quiet 120mm Router Fan Cooler. Made a real difference in games, First Descendant in particular would chug after an hour of play due to throttling. Well worth checking out if your little lad is struggling in the summer months. Metal case of PC (Peladn 7700x) was notably cooler to touch as well.
I'm considering buying an HX99G as my main PC to work from home, casual gaming etc. I mostly play games like Age of Empires DE, DoTA, Total War titles etc. I'm guessing that I can play these games with settings set to low.
I have seen multiple reviews on UM790 pro about blue screen and random restarts. Has anyone encountered any issues regarding restarting, blue screen etc with this particular model? If you have, were they resolved?
My 3rd Alder Lake N mini PC. This one will travel with me. Swapped out the Realtek 802.11ac 1x1 wifi for an Intel AX210 6E 2x2 card. Reused the factory 2242 256GB SATA SSD to an external enclosure. Installed a 2230 512GB Patriot VP4000 Mini NVMe SSD (5y warranty, TBW:110TB, SM2269XT DRAM-less controller, TLC?). Removed the factory thermal paste for Arctic MX6.
It's wonderfully quiet, BIOS came up to date with the 1200Mhz gpu clock. Enabled C states. No thermal throttling. Dual booting Batocera butterfly (btrfs, zstd) and EndeavourOS KDE (btrfs, zstd, luks). Wifi and Bluetooth range is very good. Haven't run into the issue of USB port under powering as in some reviews. The NVMe SSD write speed is a perfect match of the PCIe 3x2 M.2 B+M port. Xbox, PS2, Wii, emulation all working very well. Really happy with this little mini pc. Currently looking at USB PD trigger options to have one less power supply.
It seems like everything these days is moving towards a subscriber model, rather than owning outright. From endless streaming subscriptions to coffee, printer ink, and perhaps even a gaming mouse, it seems like it's in a company's best interests to nickel and dime your bank account—rather than gobbling big chunks of it when you make a substantial purchase.
NZXT's Flex subscription program allows you to rent that most hallowed of objects, a decently-well-specced gaming pc, in exchange for delicious monthly instalments (via The Verge). According to NZXT's newly-announced specs, for $59 a month (plus a $50 setup and shipping fee), you can be the proud not-really owner of a Player: One Core i5 14400F equipped gaming PC with an RTX 4060 handling the graphics duties.
That equates to $708 a year (minus extra fee) for a system that should actually handle modern games pretty well, although crucial specs like the RAM size and speed, along with the SSD, are missing from the new specs sheet.
Presumably they come included to make a functional machine, of course, but they do matter a lot when gauging the potential performance of your next PC purchase.
Things scale pretty quickly further up the spec sheet. The Player: Two model features an AMD Ryzen 5 5600X and an RTX 4070 Super. Both great mid-range components, but for $119 a month, that stacks up to $1,428 a year (again, plus fee) for the sort of system we regularly find on discount around the $1,200 mark.
Skytech Blaze Mini | AMD Ryzen 7 5700 | RTX 4070 Super | 16GB DDR4-3200 | 1 TB SSD |$1,499.99$1,229.99 at Newegg (save $270 with promo code NEPLDU2Z258 at checkout) This is the cheapest RTX 4070 Super build we could find, and at less than $1,300 it's a pretty great deal for a powerful rig. Admittedly, we're dealing with bog-standard DDR4 RAM, here, and a slightly older CPU, but for pure gaming chops this RTX 4070 Super-based machine should make for a pretty mean gaming PC.View Deal
Sitting at the top of the tree is the Player: Three, a system featuring an Intel Core i7 13700KF and an RTX 4070 Ti Super, again, with RAM specs and SSD specs missing. This one'll cost you $169 a month, or $2,028, and I'll be honest here, you really shouldn't be paying that much for this sort of spec in a gaming machine.
It's not that those components are bad. Far from it, as they're actually solid picks for a great gaming PC. But when we often find machines featuring the much more powerful RTX 4080 Super for less, it does strike as a bit of a bum deal.
ABS Vortex-X Ruby | Ryzen 7 7700X | RTX 4080 Super | 32 GB DDR5-6000 | 1 TB SSD | $2,399.99 $1,999.99 at Newegg (save $400) It's been a little while since we've seen an RTX 4080 Super-equipped machine at $2,000, but this system strikes as a very well-balanced and powerful set of components. The 7700X is a very speedy gaming CPU, and combined with 32 GB of fast DDR5 and that beastly GPU, this PC should fly through even the most demanding of games. As is often the case, however, you'll probably want to add in some sizeable storage when you get the chance.View Deal
There's an obvious counter argument here: this subscription system is for people that struggle to save the large amount of cash you'll need for a good machine, and NZXT are of course expecting to make some money out of the arrangement. Plus, NZXT only expect month-to-month payments that are free to cancel anytime, along with 24/7 customer support, free replacements should something go wrong with your machine, and guaranteed hardware upgrades every two years.
Looking at that RTX 4070 Ti Super machine above, however, that'd mean that if you hung on to the PC for two years in the hope of an upgrade, you'll have spent $4,056. And that's around $1,000 more than you'd pay for a discounted RTX 4090 rig if you paid up front. And trust me, not only is that system much, much more powerful than the Player: Three, it'll also be more than two years before it starts getting close to anything you could call "slow".
Ultimately, I'd advise against going for a rental option over saving your cash and buying something from our cheap gaming PC guide. There, you're going to find equivalent machines for less than you'd pay over a year under these plans, or more powerful machines for the same money, and you won't be draining your bank account each month. One large purchase, done and dusted.
Plus, if you pick well, you've now got a platform that should be upgradeable for some time to come, for much less money than you'd pay over the coming years on a subscription model like this.
AAEON first showed off the Intel Core-powered UP Squared i12 Edge in October of last year. Now the company has units in stock and ready to ship. The i12 Edge is a compact PC that measures 130 x 94 x 68mm. It’s designed to be deployed in demanding environments, with operating temperatures between 32º and […]
The cheapest computer with a Qualcomm Snapdragon X series processor is a mini PC that’s positioned as a development kit. And at $899 it may be the least expensive model, but it’s not exactly cheap. Meanwhile, laptops and tablets with Qualcomm’s new chips for Windows PCs start at $999. But that could change next year. During […]
Something like an Odroid H4 Ultra which has a stronger N305 CPU and lets you install your own fan like a BeQuiet or Noctua 92mm for a quiet experience. My issue with the H4 Ultra is that it has no wifi/bt module or usb-c port. Looking for something under $330 since that's an H4 ultra final price would be with 16gb of ram and all the other components. AMD would be fine but idk if there's anything in that price range and that also has av1 decoding. MAX of 1 system fan for the entire system.
Hello, I'm currently looking for a SFF or Mini PC to use as a Plex and Media Server as well as an IPTV device, I expect to plug USB drives on it. It only requires one HDMI 4K60 port. I was looking for 4K120 minis but those are still expensive. Would a M910x Tiny fits the bill? I can have one over Ebay for ~200$ tax included. Thanks!
Hey, as in the title I can't decide on which one to buy. I would like a nice gaming experience and a nice pc for school as well. Those of you who know your specs, which one would you buy? Right now, the Gem12 is $20 cheaper.