ASUS NUC 15 Pro NUC 15 Pro Mini Black 2025 Review

The ASUS NUC 15 Pro packs an incredible number of ports into a tiny, rugged chassis. Unfortunately, it also packs disappointing graphics performance and a high price tag for what you get.

CPU Intel Core 5 210H
RAM 16 GB
Storage 512 GB
GPU Intel Graphics
Form Factor Mini
OS Windows 11 Home
ASUS NUC 15 Pro NUC 15 Pro Mini Black 2025 desktop
57.9 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

The ASUS NUC 15 Pro is a port-packed, rugged, ultra-tiny PC that's brilliant at one thing: being a reliable appliance. Just don't ask it to play a game or edit a video.

Overview

The ASUS NUC 15 Pro is a connectivity monster in a tiny box, but it's not the powerhouse its 'Pro' name might suggest. The one thing you need to know is this: it's a specialist. It's built for someone who needs to run a ton of displays and peripherals from a silent, reliable, and incredibly small desktop, and who doesn't care about gaming or heavy creative work. If that's you, it's fantastic. If you're expecting a tiny gaming rig or a video editing beast, you'll be disappointed.

Performance

The performance story is exactly what the specs tell you. The Intel Core 5 210H is a solid mobile CPU, landing in the 34th percentile in our database. That means it's fine for office work, web browsing, and light development, but it's not going to win any rendering races. The real surprise is the GPU, which sits in the 38th percentile. That's integrated graphics for you—it'll drive those four 4K displays for spreadsheets and code, but don't even think about gaming. The 16GB of DDR5 RAM is a decent middle ground, and the 512GB SSD is okay but feels a bit tight for a 'Pro' system in 2025.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 46.9
GPU 46.6
RAM 59.6
Ports 95.5
Storage 39.9
Reliability 41.2
Social Proof 74.4

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The port selection is insane. Thunderbolt 4, Wi-Fi 7, and a total of nine video/USB ports is top-tier. 96th
  • It's incredibly small and light at 0.36kg. You can hide this thing anywhere. 74th
  • The tool-less chassis makes future RAM or storage upgrades a 30-second job.
  • The 24/7 reliability and MIL-STD certification mean it should run forever in a server closet or kiosk.

Cons

  • The integrated graphics are a deal-breaker for anything beyond basic tasks. Our gaming score is a brutal 12.4/100.
  • The CPU is just okay. For $750, you can get more raw compute power in a slightly larger mini-PC.
  • 512GB of storage feels cheap for a 'full system' at this price. You'll need an external drive fast.
  • It's competing with gaming desktops on price, which makes its value proposition look weird.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core 5 210H
Cores 8
Frequency 2.2 GHz
L3 Cache 12 MB

Graphics

GPU Intel Graphics
Type integrated

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type SSD

Build

Form Factor Mini
Weight 0.4 kg / 0.8 lbs

Connectivity

USB Ports 7
Thunderbolt 2
HDMI 2x HDMI
Wi-Fi WiFi 7
Bluetooth Yes
Ethernet 1x Ethernet

System

OS Windows 11 Home

Value & Pricing

At $750, it's a tough sell unless you absolutely need its specific superpowers. You're paying a premium for the ultra-compact form factor, military-grade durability, and that insane port array. If you don't need all three of those things, you can get more performance for your money elsewhere.

Price History

$500 $600 $700 $800 Mar 28Apr 7Apr 20Apr 26 $550

vs Competition

This is where it gets interesting. The HP OMEN 45L and Dell Alienware Aurora are in a completely different league—they're full-sized gaming towers with dedicated GPUs that will run circles around the NUC. They're not competitors for the same buyer. A more relevant match is the Intel NUC or other mini-PCs. Compared to them, the ASUS wins on ports and ruggedness but often loses on pure price-to-performance. Also, for a developer on a budget, a Mac Mini M2 often offers better CPU performance and efficiency for similar money, though you lose the Windows environment and expandability.

Spec ASUS NUC 15 Pro NUC 15 Pro Mini Dell XPS Dell - Tower Plus EBT2250 Desktop, Next-gen XPS HP OmniDesk HP - OmniDesk Desktop - Intel Core Ultra 7 265F Lenovo Legion Lenovo - Legion Tower 5i Gaming Desktop - Intel MSI Aegis MSI - Aegis ZS2 Gaming Desktop - AMD Ryzen Acer Nitro Acer Nitro 60 N60-640-UR26 Desktop, Intel Core
CPU Intel Core 5 210H Intel Core Ultra 7 Series 2 Intel Core Ultra 7 265F Intel Core Ultra 7 265F AMD Ryzen 9 7900X Intel Core i7-14700F
RAM (GB) 16 32 32 32 32 32
Storage (GB) 512 2048 1024 1000 1000 2048
GPU Intel Graphics NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 Ti NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 Ti NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 Ti
Form Factor Mini mid-tower Desktop mid-tower Desktop Desktop
Psu W - 460 400 500 650 850
OS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortStorageReliabilitySocial Proof
ASUS NUC 15 Pro NUC 15 Pro Mini 46.946.659.695.539.941.274.4
Dell XPS Tower Plus Compare 89.769.986.39687.771.999.8
HP OmniDesk OmniDesk Compare 87.569.988.599.666.171.997.6
Lenovo Legion Tower 5i Gaming Compare 87.574.688.599.459.371.999.8
MSI Aegis ZS2 Gaming Compare 91.574.691.399.159.341.299.8
Acer Nitro 60 N60-640-UR26 Compare 83.974.679.582.293.136.188.7

Common Questions

Q: Can I upgrade the RAM and storage?

Yes, and easily. The tool-less chassis lets you pop it open in seconds. The 16GB of DDR5 is on a single SODIMM, so you can swap it for a 32GB or 64GB stick. The 512GB SSD is also user-replaceable.

Q: Can it really run four 4K monitors?

On paper, yes, thanks to the two HDMI 2.1 ports and Thunderbolt 4 outputs. In practice, it'll do it for office work and coding. Don't expect to run four streams of 4K video smoothly—that's asking too much of the integrated graphics.

Q: Is this good for light gaming or photo editing?

No, and no. The Intel integrated graphics are a hard limit. It'll struggle with anything beyond very old or 2D games. For photo editing, it'll be sluggish with large files. This is a productivity and connectivity machine, not a creative workstation.

Who Should Skip This

If you're a gamer, streamer, video editor, or 3D artist, this isn't it. Your money is much better spent on a desktop with a dedicated GPU, even a budget one. Go look at the HP OMEN or a built-to-order tower instead. Also, if you just want a fast general-purpose PC, a laptop or a more powerful mini-PC will serve you better.

Verdict

We can only recommend the ASUS NUC 15 Pro to a very specific user: the IT manager setting up digital signage or a kiosk, the developer who needs a compact, reliable headless server, or the office user who must drive four monitors from a device that fits in a desk drawer. For everyone else—especially gamers, creatives, or general users looking for a main PC—its weak graphics and middling CPU make it hard to justify. It's a brilliant tool for a narrow job.