- Odinn Omnia weighs 37 kg and contains four Nvidia GPUs inside
- Dual AMD EPYC processors deliver 384-core combined performance
- System includes 6TB of DDR5 ECC registered RAM
Some pieces of hardware exist less to solve an obvious problem and more to test the outer limits of what anyone is willing to build.
The Odinn Omnia falls squarely into that category, combining data center scale components into a box that weighs around 37kg.
The system has carrying handles, which technically allow it to be lifted, assuming the person trying to lift it has no plans for their lower back afterwards.
Move a data center
Calling the Odinn Omnia a laptop PC requires a generous definition of laptop and an indulgent sense of humor.
But for what it offers, the possibility of moving it perhaps deserves that humor.
The Omnia is inevitably reminiscent of laptops from the 1980s, such as the Compaq Portable.
They were considered mobile only because someone could move them between rooms without needing a forklift.
Those machines weighed much less than the Omnia and still earned their reputation as arm-stretching beasts.
The difference now is the scale. While those early systems squeezed office computing into a suitcase-sized shell, Omnia squeezes contemporary server hardware into a single shell and dares to call it mobile.
Inside the chassis, the Odinn Omnia includes specifications more commonly associated with dedicated server racks.
The system supports up to two AMD EPYC 9965 processors, allowing for up to 384 CPU cores in total.
Graphics acceleration scales to four Nvidia H200 NVL GPUs with up to 564GB of combined VRAM.
Memory capacity reaches 6TB of DDR5 ECC registered RAM, while storage can be expanded to 1PB of NVMe SSD capacity.
The system specifies network throughput of up to 400 Gbps, which is an unusual figure to associate with anything that has an identifier.
The case includes redundant Platinum-rated power supply units and integrated cooling hardware.
This reinforces the idea that this device is a premium server device rather than a laptop PC.
The presence of a 23.8-inch 4K display and a flip-up keyboard seems almost whimsical, given the industrial intent of the hardware behind them.
Odinn showed off Omnia at CES 2026 this week, although public exposure so far remains limited.
Today, the company mainly offers a polished video demo rather than an extensive hands-on verification.
Odinn hasn’t confirmed pricing, but analysts expect a fully loaded configuration to approach or exceed $500,000 based solely on current component costs.
That estimate makes the idea of informally transporting the system even more surreal, especially in environments where asset control and security already present challenges.
The Omnia fits into a small category of intentionally strange computing devices, joining multi-screen laptops and extreme mobile workstations that seem designed as much to provoke disbelief as to solve practical problems.
It looks like a scaled-down data center until it can technically be transported, even if few people would reasonably do so.
Whether that makes sense depends entirely on the circumstances, but the shock value alone ensures that it will be remembered long after the laptop PC jokes run out of steam.
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