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The mini PC-Console GPD WIN Max 2 is official with Ryzen 7 6800U or Core i7-1260P processors from 875 euros


The mini PC-Console GPD WIN Max 2 is official with Ryzen 7 6800U or Core i7-1260P processors from 875 euros



GPD has officially announced its new device, the GPD Win Max 2. We already knew some details previously, but now the financing project with its indiegogo campaign is now official with all the specifications and details.

This pocket “console”, or gaming-oriented mini PC maintains a design similar to that of other GPD creations, but is brought up to date with the new processors Intel Core i7-1260P Alder Lake or recent AMD Ryzen 7 6800U with Zen 3+ architecture. Both with options to 16 or 32 GB of RAM.

Offers connectivity to the latest con USB4 or Thunderbolt 4 (and support for external graphics and 100W charging), along with up to 2TB NVMe M.2 SSD with PCIe 4.0 interface, optional LTE, Bluetooth 5.2 and WiFi 6, all managed by Windows 11.

In the case of the model with the Core i7-1260p, the integrated GPU will be the Iris Xe of 96 Eus. It will be the most powerful option with the AMD Ryzen 7 6800U, thanks to its Radeon 680M graphics with RDNA 2 architecture.

Geeknetic The mini PC-Console GPD WIN Max 2 is official with Ryzen 7 6800U or Core i7-1260P processors from 875 euros 1

This hardware will go under a keyboard QWERTY with two joysticks and game buttons, and a 10.1-inch screen with touch support. Your panel is 2560 x 1600 pixels, although it will default to 1920 x 1200.

Its price on Indiegogo starts from about 875 euros in the version with Ryzen 7 6800U, 128 GB of SSD and 16 GB of RAM. It will be a special edition with only 50 units that will not be sold after the campaign. The most basic model that will be sold in the final version will arrive with 1 TB of SSD and will cost around 973 euros.

Geeknetic The mini PC-Console GPD WIN Max 2 is official with Ryzen 7 6800U or Core i7-1260P processors from 875 euros 2

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Article Writer: Antonio Delgado

Antonio Delgado

Computer Engineer by training, writer and hardware analyst at Geeknetic since 2011. I love to gut everything that passes through my hands, especially the latest hardware that we receive here to review. In my free time I mess around with 3d printers, drones and other junk. For anything here I am.

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