AMD PELADN WO4 Mini Gaming PC - AMD Ryzen 5 Review

The PELADN WO4 mini PC promises gaming in a tiny box, but its integrated Vega graphics struggle. It's better suited as a silent, compact office machine.

CPU AMD Ryzen 5 5600H
RAM 16 GB
Storage 512 GB
GPU AMD Radeon Vega 10 Mobile
Form Factor Mini
AMD PELADN WO4 Mini Gaming PC - AMD Ryzen 5 desktop
54.2 Puntuación global

The 30-Second Version

The PELADN WO4 is a capable mini PC for basic tasks, but don't believe the 'gaming' hype. Its integrated Vega graphics are weak. It's best as a compact, silent office machine or media center. At $360, it's okay if size is your top concern.

Overview

The PELADN WO4 is a tiny PC that tries to do a lot for not much money. It packs a last-gen AMD Ryzen 5 5600H mobile CPU and integrated Vega graphics into a box barely bigger than your hand, promising enough oomph for light gaming and office work.

On paper, it's a compelling package with 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD, and a surprising number of ports, including dual Ethernet and triple display support. But specs on a spec sheet and real-world performance are two different things, and our testing shows where this little machine shines and where it stumbles.

Performance

The Ryzen 5 5600H CPU is the star here. It's a solid 12-thread chip that handles everyday multitasking, web browsing, and office apps without breaking a sweat. Our benchmarks put its CPU performance in the 29th percentile for mini PCs, which sounds low but means it's perfectly adequate for its intended use. The real bottleneck is the integrated Radeon Vega graphics. It lands in the 32nd percentile, which translates to 'just okay' for gaming. You can play older or less demanding titles at 1080p on low settings, but don't expect miracles. It's fine for Minecraft or League of Legends, but anything more modern will be a slideshow.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 41
GPU 40.7
RAM 52.3
Ports 67.5
Storage 39.5
Reliability 18.3
Social Proof 95.2

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Tiny, silent, and power-efficient design. 95th
  • Surprisingly good port selection with dual Ethernet and triple display output. 68th
  • Comes with a decent 16GB of RAM right out of the box.
  • Easy to open up and expand the storage or memory.

Cons

  • Integrated graphics are weak for anything beyond very light gaming. 18th
  • CPU and GPU performance are both below average for the category.
  • The 512GB SSD is on the small side for a gaming machine.
  • Brand reliability scores in our database are quite low.

The Word on the Street

4.3/5 (112 reviews)
👍 Many buyers are impressed with how small, quiet, and power-efficient it is, perfect for a clean desk setup.
👍 Users appreciate that it comes with Windows 11 pre-installed and runs office applications and web browsing very smoothly.
🤔 There's a split opinion on gaming performance, with some finding it adequate for older titles and others disappointed it can't handle newer games well.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU AMD Ryzen 5 5600H
Cores 12
Frequency 3.3 GHz
L3 Cache 16 MB

Graphics

GPU Radeon Vega 10 Mobile
Type discrete
VRAM 16 GB

Memory & Storage

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

Build

Form Factor Mini
Weight 1.3 kg / 2.9 lbs

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 6
Bluetooth Yes
Ethernet 2.5Gbe

Value & Pricing

At around $360, the value proposition is a bit of a mixed bag. You're getting a complete, ready-to-go Windows PC in a tiny form factor, which is great. The included RAM and decent port selection save you money on upgrades and dongles. But you're also paying for last-gen mobile hardware that's been repurposed for a desktop. For the same price, you could often find a used office desktop with more powerful desktop-class components, though it would be much larger and louder. It's worth the money if your top priority is size and silence over raw power.

360 US$

vs Competition

This sits in a crowded field. Compared to something like a Beelink SER5 (also with a 5600H), the PELADN offers dual Ethernet, which is a niche win for homelab tinkerers. Against newer mini PCs with Intel N100 or AMD 7000-series chips, the PELADN's older CPU and weaker integrated graphics start to show their age. The big-name competitors listed (like the HP Omen or Alienware) are in a completely different league—they're full-sized gaming desktops with discrete GPUs that cost three times as much. The PELADN's real competition is other budget mini PCs, and while its port selection is a standout, its core performance is middle-of-the-pack.

Spec AMD PELADN WO4 Mini Gaming PC - AMD Ryzen 5 HP OMEN HP OMEN 45L Gaming Desktop, Intel Core Ultra 7 MSI MSI EdgeXpert-11SUS AI Supercomputer Dell Dell Tower Plus Desktop Computer Lenovo T Series Towers Legion Tower 5a Gen 10 (30L AMD) 90YJ001LUS Apple Mac Studio Apple - Mac Studio - M3 Ultra - 1TB SSD - Silver
CPU AMD Ryzen 5 5600H Intel Core Ultra 7 265K NVIDIA GB Intel Core Ultra 7 265 AMD Ryzen 7 7700X Apple M3 Ultra
RAM (GB) 16 32 128 32 32 96
Storage (GB) 512 2048 4096 1024 2048 1000
GPU AMD Radeon Vega 10 Mobile NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 NVIDIA NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Apple M3 Ultra 60-core
Form Factor Mini Desktop Mini Tower Tower -
Psu W - 850 240 750 850 -
OS - Windows 11 Pro NVIDIA DGX OS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home macOS
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Common Questions

Q: Can this really run games?

It can run older or less demanding esports titles like League of Legends or CS:GO at 1080p on low settings, but don't expect to play modern AAA games smoothly. The integrated Vega graphics are the main limitation.

Q: Is the RAM and storage upgradeable?

Yes. It has two SO-DIMM slots for RAM (supports up to 64GB) and supports adding a 2.5-inch SATA drive alongside the M.2 SSD, making storage expansion easy.

Q: How many monitors can it support?

It supports triple monitors simultaneously via its HDMI 2.0, DisplayPort 1.4, and USB-C (with DisplayPort Alt Mode) outputs, all at up to 4K 60Hz.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this if you're a serious gamer or need horsepower for video editing, 3D rendering, or other intensive workloads. The integrated graphics and mobile-class CPU just aren't cut out for that. Also, if brand reputation and long-term reliability are major concerns, our data shows PELADN scores low on that front, so you might want a more established brand.

Verdict

Buy this if you need a dead-silent, ultra-compact PC for basic home office tasks, media streaming, and maybe some very light, old-school gaming. It's a solid choice for a secondary computer, a living room media box, or a low-power home server. The dual NICs and wake-on-LAN features are a nice bonus for tech enthusiasts. Just go in with realistic expectations about what 'gaming' means on integrated Vega graphics.