Gaming mini-PC looks like a laptop without a screen — AtomMan G7 Ti packs Core i9-14900HX CPU, RTX 4070 Mobile GPU, and up to 96GB RAM
The AtomMan G7 Ti boasts a 14th Gen Core i9 and mobile RTX 4070, while the SE version bumps down the affair to a Core i7
This week, Minisforum launched another AtomMan-branded mini-PC for pre-orders: the AtomMan G7 Ti and its G7 Ti SE counterpart. This mini-PC is so slim that it has also been compared to a laptop without a screen. Internally, the machine has the mobile versions of Intel's 14th Generation Core i9-14900HX or Core i7-14650HX CPUs and an RTX 4070 Mobile GPU in either model.
While the device is officially announced for pre-order, the page says nothing regarding final pricing besides offering a $50 off voucher to those who join a mailing list. We aren't sure why this information has yet to be added, and there doesn't even seem to be a way to pre-order the machine yet, but it's a downside worth noting. The AtomMan G7 PT, which comes in a slightly thicker form factor while outfitted with AMD hardware, currently starts at $999 in a barebones configuration.
Minisforum AtomMan G7 Ti (SE) Specifications
Header Cell - Column 0 | AtomMan G7 Ti Specs | AtomMan G7 Ti SE Specs |
---|---|---|
CPU | Intel Core i9-14900HX | Intel Core i7-14650HX |
RAM | Up to 96GB Dual-Channel @ 5,600 MT/s | Up to 96GB Dual-Channel @ 5,600 MT/s |
Storage | 2 NVMe Gen 4 Slots | 2 NVMe Gen 4 Slots |
GPU | Nvidia RTX 4070 Mobile | Nvidia RTX 4070 Mobile |
Front I/O | 2 USB 3.2 Type-A Ports; 1 3.5mm Audio Jack; 1 SD Card Slot; 1 "Mode Switch" Button | 2 USB 3.2 Type-A Ports; 1 3.5mm Audio Jack; 1 SD Card Slot; 1 "Mode Switch" Button |
Rear I/O | 1 USB 3.2 Type-A Port, 1 USB4 Type-C DP/PD Port; 1 HDMI 2.1 Port, 1 RJ-45 Ethernet Port | 1 USB 3.2 Type-A Port, 1 USB4 Type-C DP/PD Port; 1 HDMI 2.1 Port, 1 RJ-45 Ethernet Port |
Wireless Technologies | Wi-Fi 7 (M.2); Bluetooth 5.4 (BE200) | Wi-Fi 7 (M.2); Bluetooth 5.4 (BE200) |
Besides the form factor and basic specifications on offer, the Minisforum AtomMan G7 Ti (and SE) also offers a reasonably involved software Command Center, which includes controls for RGB lighting, toggling between Office Mode and Game Mode, some temperature readings, and a "Fast cooling" toggle. The Office and Game Modes operate at 140W and 180W, respectively, and can also be toggled with a Mode Switch button available on the front I/O of the device.
There's also some implication here: users must bring and install their own SO-DIMM RAM kits and NVMe Gen 4 storage. The AtomMan G7 Ti supports up to 96GB of DDR5-5600 RAM in a dual-channel setup. Meanwhile, storage options include two PCIe 4.0 M.2 ports.
The overall offering seems promising, and the supplementary features are pretty nice. However, it's challenging to provide any sweeping recommendation without openly available pricing information, and, strangely, Minisforum would announce a device for pre-order without making it available for pre-order or even finalizing its price.
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Christopher Harper has been a successful freelance tech writer specializing in PC hardware and gaming since 2015, and ghostwrote for various B2B clients in High School before that. Outside of work, Christopher is best known to friends and rivals as an active competitive player in various eSports (particularly fighting games and arena shooters) and a purveyor of music ranging from Jimi Hendrix to Killer Mike to the Sonic Adventure 2 soundtrack.
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thestryker Article states DDR5 6500 multiple places which is just a transpose as it's 5600.Reply
I'm really curious what these types of devices will end up looking like when CAMM modules have more general availability. I'd be really tempted to get something like this as a low power consumption gaming system if it could support higher speed DRAM. -
kealii123
The cheapest RTX 4070 laptops are under $1100 right now. Very unlikely this will be anywhere near that price.thestryker said:Article states DDR5 6500 multiple places which is just a transpose as it's 5600.
I'm really curious what these types of devices will end up looking like when CAMM modules have more general availability. I'd be really tempted to get something like this as a low power consumption gaming system if it could support higher speed DRAM.
Unless they offer a significant value over a traditional clamshell laptop I just don't see the point of these.
I would think that a mini PC with a laptop CPU in essentially an eGPU enclouser that allows for smaller form factor desktop GPUs would be a better consumer product. I get that this kinda exists with external Occulink adapters, but they are all clunky, made up of several different parts, bring-your-own-power-supply affiars that don't fully enclose the GPU.
Maybe a slim as possible mini PC, not unlike this, that has a GaN power supply for the desktop GPU and use an in-house branded GPU with a blower cooler, or even an offset cooler, to reduce the footprint. IDK if that could ever get price competitive with a laptop, when the cheapest RTX 4090 laptops are under $3k and will perform as well as a 4080 desktop for most workloads & gaming. -
thestryker
Minisforum pricing is usually comparative to equivalent hardware laptop pricing. It's the big name manufacturers who always fleece for the minipcs which I've never quite understood for exactly the reason you state.kealii123 said:The cheapest RTX 4070 laptops are under $1100 right now. Very unlikely this will be anywhere near that price.
Unless they offer a significant value over a traditional clamshell laptop I just don't see the point of these.
That being said a 14900HX/4070 laptop is more like $1700+ still so there's a lot of room for them to undercut not that they will. If it's anything like the Intel 11th Gen/3070 one they did the pricing will be about the same as a laptop or a bit higher than the lowest available. The time to get one of these would be when they're closing them out as that Intel one I mentioned went for around $800 when it was still competitive. -
t3t4 Finally, they're beginning to finally think about making what I've been wanting for far too long now. I don't need/want the mouse/screen/keyboard, I only want the motherboard with desktop chip cooling, in a small box. None of these mini-PC's to date have any GPU power, but laptops do! I'm still thinking about just building my own to finally get what I want, but I cringe at the thought of paying for a bunch of hardware I don't need just to get the one part I do need.Reply
But unless they put some real desktop chip coolers in there somewhere, it's just going to be another obnoxious oven with tiny little baby fans that cry all day long!
Thermal throttle is never an acceptable condition, let alone an option! My 12th gen i9 will thermal throttle just simply opening a web browser.... Unacceptable! Yeah, I still probably have to build my own to finally get what I want, none of these manufacturers seem willing to do what it takes to pack top of the line hardware into a small box AND keep it cool enough without using obnoxious little baby fans that just make my ears bleed. But it is nice to see that someone is finally beginning to think in this direction. -
kyzarvs Someone skipping the proofread?Reply
announce a device for pre-order without making it available for pre-order
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pixelpusher220 kealii123 said:The cheapest RTX 4070 laptops are under $1100 right now. Very unlikely this will be anywhere near that price.
Unless they offer a significant value over a traditional clamshell laptop I just don't see the point of these.
I would think that a mini PC with a laptop CPU in essentially an eGPU enclouser that allows for smaller form factor desktop GPUs would be a better consumer product. I get that this kinda exists with external Occulink adapters, but they are all clunky, made up of several different parts, bring-your-own-power-supply affiars that don't fully enclose the GPU.
Yeah, all the portability with none of the actual 'portable' use. A *slight* improvement over NUC type form factors with the actual GPU but that seems about it to me. -
truerock
Take any notebook computer...Admin said:Minisforum launches another NUC-like Mini PC, now in the form of the AtomMan G7 Ti.
Gaming mini-PC looks like a laptop without a screen — AtomMan G7 Ti packs Core i9-14900HX CPU, RTX 4070 Mobile GPU, and up to 96GB RAM : Read more
Delete the screen
Delete the keyboard
Delete the battery
and you have a mini-PC at a good price point.
You would be using industry standard parts in an industry standard form factor. -
fla56
Er 14th Gen Intel? Good luckkealii123 said:The cheapest RTX 4070 laptops are under $1100 right now. Very unlikely this will be anywhere near that price.
Unless they offer a significant value over a traditional clamshell laptop I just don't see the point of these.
I would think that a mini PC with a laptop CPU in essentially an eGPU enclouser that allows for smaller form factor desktop GPUs would be a better consumer product. I get that this kinda exists with external Occulink adapters, but they are all clunky, made up of several different parts, bring-your-own-power-supply affiars that don't fully enclose the GPU.
Maybe a slim as possible mini PC, not unlike this, that has a GaN power supply for the desktop GPU and use an in-house branded GPU with a blower cooler, or even an offset cooler, to reduce the footprint. IDK if that could ever get price competitive with a laptop, when the cheapest RTX 4090 laptops are under $3k and will perform as well as a 4080 desktop for most workloads & gaming.