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Minisforum Atomman G1 Pro mini PC
86

AtomMan G1 Pro review

Remarkably well thought out, just remember to bring a USB hub.

(Image: © Future)

Our Verdict

Insanely compact and thoroughly well built, the G1 Pro captures an impressive amount of performance for a remarkably reasonable price. It's not flawless, it can run hot, and you'll need a USB hub to really take advantage of it, but if you're after a solid machine that can game, handle productivity tasks well, and even act as a console replacement, this'll do nicely.

For

  • Insanely compact form factor
  • Decent value
  • Solid gaming performance at 1440p
  • Quiet enough
  • Remarkably portable

Against

  • CPU performance could be better
  • Cooling is mixed
  • You're going to need a USB hub

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One thing I will highlight as a potential issue, though, is the whole I/O situation. Just full stop, period. It's incredibly limited. You've got a total of two USB Type-C ports (one on the front, one on the back), three USB Type-A (again one on the front, two on the back), a 5G Ethernet, one audio out (in front), and well that's it (aside from the obvious display outputs, WiFi 7 and Bluetooth). It ain't a lot, so if you're serious about your setup, you're going to want to invest in a solid USB hub of some description.

Generally, though, build quality, very good. Aesthetics, top-tier. Expandable, internals excellent. Cooling, a bit of a swing and a miss in some cases. I/O, eugh. But the performance, now that is the interesting bit. And let's face it, it kind of needs to be for the price (£1,350 in the UK, $1,439 in the US with a hefty discount at time of writing).

Thermal performance

Avg CPU Temp (°C)
Max CPU Temp (°C)
Avg GPU Temp (°C)
Max GPU Temp (°C)
AtomMan G1 Pro | RTX 5060 | 8945HX
89
91
77
67
Framework Desktop | 8060S | Max+ 395
76
79
0255075100
Gaming Temps Data
ProductValue
AtomMan G1 Pro | RTX 5060 | 8945HX 89 Avg CPU Temp (°C), 91 Max CPU Temp (°C), 77 Avg GPU Temp (°C), 67 Max GPU Temp (°C)
Framework Desktop | 8060S | Max+ 395 76 Avg CPU Temp (°C), 79 Max CPU Temp (°C)

In the G1 Pro, because it's got such a compact form factor, it naturally runs hot. In that default mode, max CPU temps throughout our computational tests landed at 93 °C. In-game, that top temp hit a staggering 91 °C in consecutive runs of Metro Exodus, with an average of 89 °C overall.

Now, yes, technically the 8945HX does have a TJmax temp of 100 °C, but outside of bragging rights, and that one-off benchmark run you do when your office is 7 degrees, because you've left the window open all night, those profiles arguably aren't really worth it. Particularly as it doesn't affect the GPU. That's a bit weird, too, by the way, because that RTX 5060 is surprisingly efficient given its size (good work, Gigabyte).

In computational tests (Blender in particular), it maxed out at 67 °C overall. In-game, though, the figure was markedly higher at 77 °C overall. Clearly, there's headroom there still, specifically for that graphics card to be pushed a little harder, which is surprising that Minisforum didn't bake something in for that specifically.

1 / 2

Gaming performance

Avg FPS
1% Low FPS
AtomMan G1 Pro | RTX 5060 | 8945HX
44
38
Framework Desktop | 8060S | Max+ 395
36
26
015304560
Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora (1440p Ultra) Data
ProductValue
AtomMan G1 Pro | RTX 5060 | 8945HX 44 Avg FPS, 38 1% Low FPS
Framework Desktop | 8060S | Max+ 395 36 Avg FPS, 26 1% Low FPS

Temps aside, gaming performance overall is fairly robust. At 1440p, Cyberpunk manages 32 fps on the Ray Tracing Medium preset. Stick DLSS on at Quality and slap frame gen up to x2 with the CNN model, and that figure shoots up to 86 fps, making the thing more than an enjoyable experience. Similarly, Metro Exodus on Ultra equally manages 52 fps, and Black Myth comes in at 37 fps (albeit with the help of some DLSS goodness). I also tested this in Total War: Warhammer 3 at 1440p Ultra, and both the battle benchmark and campaign benchie came in at 72 and 65 fps, respectively, for the plucky little RTX 5060. That's not quite as good as its full-fat desktop cousin, at least not from our own results, but given there's a laptop CPU powering the lot, masquerading as a desktop big boy, you've maybe got to expect some losses there.

CPU performance, though, well, again, it does depend on how hard you want to run it. In Office mode, Cinebench 2024 saw scores of 1,323 on the multi-core and 111 on single core, that's about 41 points per thread on the multi-thread test, which is okay for efficiency, not bad by any means, but about 50% less efficient than what you'd find on something like the 9950X3D.

Creator performance

Single core index
Multi thread index
AtomMan G1 Pro | RTX 5060 | 8945HX
111
1323
Framework Desktop | 8060S | Max+ 395
114
1908
05001,0001,5002,000
Cinebench 2024 Data
ProductValue
AtomMan G1 Pro | RTX 5060 | 8945HX 111 Single core index, 1323 Multi thread index
Framework Desktop | 8060S | Max+ 395 114 Single core index, 1908 Multi thread index

Still, it's doing all that in a tiny 3.8L case, with a 350 W PSU, and a remarkably compact cooling solution to boot. Credit where credit's due, there are literal physical limits to what can be achieved at these kinds of form factors, and if you want a machine that's smaller than a PS5 that sits on your desktop comfortably and quite happily games at 1080p and 1440p, you'd be hard-pressed to find something just as potent for less. It certainly beats out the much older G7 PT.

I've had a quick peruse online too, and to match the G1 Pro, spec for spec, with the cheapest available components I could find, the price you're looking at is about $1,440, or £1,342 or so (eerily close, guessing the humies at MinisForum have done their research). That's with a Ryzen 5 9600X, A620I motherboard, RTX 5060, 1 TB SSD, and 32 GB of DDR5, sat inside of a Cooler Master MasterBox NR200P V2 (although you could switch for the slightly larger Phanteks XT V3 and shave off about $60).

But here's the thing. You have to build that. You still have to buy Windows, and it's still going to be considerably larger than the AtomMan G1 Pro, for maybe only slightly better performance, and in CPU terms not really. To circle back to what I was saying earlier, the G1 is very much this hybridisation design. It's built very specifically to challenge traditional gaming consoles, laptops, and ITX PCs while encapsulating what they do best, but with far greater versatility. You can fit this thing in a rucksack, carry it to the office, a LAN event (people still do those right?), or claw back some much-needed desk space so you can show off more of your Warhammer 40K collection. Is it perfect? No. Is it as powerful as a full desktop equivalent? No. But it shouldn't need to be.

Minisforum AtomMan G7 PT mini PC
Best mini PC 2026

1. Best overall:
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2. Best budget:
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3. Best pure gaming:
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4. Best compact:
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5. Best looking:
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6. Best iGPU for gaming:
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7. Best for AI:
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👉Check out our full mini PC guide👈

The Verdict
AtomMan G1 Pro

Insanely compact and thoroughly well built, the G1 Pro captures an impressive amount of performance for a remarkably reasonable price. It's not flawless, it can run hot, and you'll need a USB hub to really take advantage of it, but if you're after a solid machine that can game, handle productivity tasks well, and even act as a console replacement, this'll do nicely.

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