- Minisforum’s latest high-spec mini PC, the AtomMan G7 Pro, goes on sale
- Core i9-14900HX and RTX 5070 power a slim aluminum chassis design
- Supports up to 96GB of DDR5 memory with two M.2 slots including PCIe 5.0 storage
Minisforum’s latest mini PC, the AtomMan G7 Pro, is now available for purchase. The base version will cost you $1,359.90, down from its MSRP of $1,699, while the 32GB/1TB model with Windows 11 Pro costs $1,679.90, down from $2,099.
The AtomMan G7 Pro’s slim aluminum chassis, which looks more like a gaming console or router than a traditional PC, measures just 385 x 236 x 33mm.
It can sit flat on a desk or stand vertically with an optional stand, taking up a much smaller footprint than a tower system.
Up to 96GB DDR5
The mini PC is powered by Intel’s Core i9-14900HX, a 24-core, 32-thread processor with speeds of up to 5.8 GHz.
Graphics come from an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 laptop GPU with 8GB of GDDR7 memory. AI performance is rated up to 798 TOPS on the GPU, giving the system headroom for modern creative, computing, and AI-assisted workloads.
Memory support increases up to 96GB of DDR5 via two SODIMM slots, with speeds supported up to 5600.
Storage is handled by two NVMe M.2 2280 slots, one running PCIe 5.0 x4 and the other running PCIe 4.0 x4, allowing for up to 8TB of total SSD capacity.
Cooling is based on a six-heatpipe configuration with two turbo fans and exhaust outlets on three sides of the chassis.
The mini PC offers a number of operating modes that adjust power limits and fan behavior depending on whether you need speed or quieter performance.
Ports include USB4 with display output and up to 40Gbps bandwidth, USB 3.2 Gen1 and Gen2 ports, a data-only USB-C 3.2 Gen1 port, HDMI 2.1 FRL, 2.5Gb Ethernet, an SD4.0 UHS-II card reader, and a 3.5mm combo audio jack.
Wireless connectivity includes Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4, and the system can control up to four external displays.
The AtomMan G7 Pro is another solid mini PC from Minisforum, although it won’t be the best option for all buyers.
For a similar price, you can pick up Dell’s Alienware Aurora, which offers a faster desktop Core Ultra CPU and a graphics card with 12GB of VRAM, avoiding some of the limits that come with compact designs.
However, that system is physically larger and heavier, so it really comes down to whether performance or size matters more to you.
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