The form factor of an Apple Mac Mini with the gaming capabilities of a Windows machine, all for around $510. That's what you get with the Yohris mini PC, which was recently featured in a video by the famous YouTuber ETA Prime.
The Mac mini-style Windows mini gaming PC tested by the YouTuber was powered by an Intel Core i7-13620H CPU, an Nvidia GeForce RTX 4050 GPU with 6 GB of GDDR6 VRAM, 512GB SSD and 16 GB of DDR5 memory. You can, however, order the Yohris mini PC with up to 64 GB of DDR5 RAM and up to a 2 TB SSD straight from the OEM.
For connectivity, the mini gaming PC has Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2. If it’s not obvious by now, the device is basically using laptop parts. Still, it is fairly easy to upgrade. To get inside, you just need to remove four screws, and you can then upgrade the RAM and SSD. By default, the Yohris mini PC comes with one free M.2 slot, which is also standard with most Windows laptops.
The rear IO is generous for the size: power input, four USB 2.0 ports, two USB 3.2 Type-A, dual HDMI, Thunderbolt 4 and separate 3.5 mm jacks for line in and line out. Up front you get two more full-size USB 3.0 ports. Triple-display output is possible via both HDMI ports plus the USB4/Thunderbolt port.
On the performance front, the Yohris mini gaming PC logged a Geekbench 6 score of 2,500 in single-core and 10,724 in multi-core for the Core i7-13620H. According to Notebookcheck’s data, this is slightly below the average scores of 2,568 for single-core and 11,687 for multi-core tests.
In 3DMark Time Spy, the RTX 4050 posted an overall score of 8,659 with a graphics score of 8,300. Both figures are higher than Notebookcheck’s internal averages, which place the RTX 4050 at 7,980 overall and 7,751 for graphics.
During a stress test conducted by the YouTuber, the CPU package power briefly spiked to 82 W before settling at a sustained 45 W, while the RTX 4050’s TGP remained below the common 80 W ceiling. Overall, thermal management seemed more favourable for the GPU than the CPU in this mini PC.
The Core i7-13620H averaged 73 °C in 1440p gaming and briefly touched 96 °C under stress, hinting at momentary thermal throttling, as per ETA PRIME. By contrast, the RTX 4050 averaged 64 °C with a recorded peak of 75 °C, indicating better headroom on the GPU side.
As for the gaming, Forza Horizon 5 ran at 1440p High with DLSS off at well over 100 FPS. Cyberpunk 2077 at 1080p High with DLSS Quality was playable, and enabling frame generation pushed averages beyond 120 FPS. Hogwarts Legacy at 1080p Medium with DLSS Balanced averaged 80 FPS, while Marvel Rivals at 1080p High with DLSS Quality hovered around 108 FPS. God of War Ragnarök ran smoothly at 1080p High with DLSS Balanced, but Ultra presets in most titles were limited by VRAM.
ETA Prime noted that the $510 pricing can fluctuate, and buyers may incur additional taxes or import duties depending on the region. The YouTuber also performed a teardown and a more detailed analysis in the video, which is linked below.