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Minisforum M2 Pro packs Panther Lake, 128 GB RAM and OCuLink

Minisforum has a new mini-PC that tries to do a bit of everything without growing into a full-size desktop. The M2 Pro is built around Intel’s Panther Lake-H chips, supports up to 128 GB of LPDDR5X memory, adds OCuLink f

Image: ixbt.com

Minisforum has a new mini-PC that tries to do a bit of everything without growing into a full-size desktop. The M2 Pro is built around Intel’s Panther Lake-H chips, supports up to 128 GB of LPDDR5X memory, adds OCuLink for an external graphics card, and leans hard into local AI with a combined 180 TOPS claim.

That is a very specific shopping list, and it is clearly aimed at buyers who want workstation flexibility in a box small enough to hide behind a monitor. The pitch is also timely: mini-PC makers have spent the last year turning compact machines into overachievers, while Intel has been pushing integrated graphics and on-device AI as reasons to care about its newer mobile parts.

Panther Lake-H and Xe3 inside

The M2 Pro uses an Intel Panther Lake-H processor with Xe3 graphics. Minisforum says the new graphics setup delivers around 50% better performance than Lunar Lake-generation solutions, which is the kind of claim that immediately invites benchmarking season. If it holds up, the chip should make the machine far more usable for light creative work, casual gaming, and accelerated AI tasks than the usual mini-PC fare.

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For users who think “integrated graphics” is another way of saying “don’t get excited,” OCuLink is the escape hatch. It lets the M2 Pro pair with an external GPU, which is still one of the cleaner ways to give a tiny computer real graphics muscle without bolting on a second power brick the size of a brick.

AI features without the cloud

Minisforum is also selling the system as an AI box, not just a small desktop. The company says the CPU, NPU5 block, and graphics core together deliver 180 TOPS, enough to run local models such as DeepSeek-R1 without sending data off to cloud services. A dedicated Microsoft Copilot button and an onboard microphone array make that AI angle less subtle than a neon sign, but at least the hardware matches the marketing for once.

  • Up to 128 GB LPDDR5X memory
  • Three M.2 PCIe 4.0 slots for storage
  • Three USB-A ports and three USB4 ports
  • HDMI, DisplayPort, SD card slot, and 3.5 mm audio jack
  • 10 Gbit/s and 2.5 Gbit/s Ethernet

Ports, storage and a metal shell

There is also no shortage of connectivity. Alongside the fast Ethernet ports, the M2 Pro includes HDMI, DisplayPort, an SD card slot, and a 3.5 mm audio jack, plus the usual spread of USB connections. The metal chassis and VESA mounting support make it easy to tuck behind a monitor, which is exactly where many of these machines end up: out of sight, doing real work, and quietly replacing much bigger desktops.

The bigger question is how much of this will matter outside the spec sheet. Mini-PCs have been steadily creeping upward in power, but the M2 Pro is still trying to solve several problems at once: AI, graphics, storage, and office use. If Minisforum can keep thermals and pricing sensible, this could be one of the more interesting compact PCs to watch. If not, it becomes another impressive brochure with a very busy back panel.

Tomas Berg

Computing Editor

Tomas lives in the terminal. He covers chips, laptops, and operating systems with a focus on performance and efficiency. He reads kernel changelogs the way other people read fiction, and he's always on the hunt for the perfect mechanical keyboard switch. If it processes data, Tomas has an opinion on it.

via ixbt.com

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