Lenovo IdeaCentre Lenovo IdeaCentre Mini Desktop Intel Core Review
The Lenovo IdeaCentre Mini crams a 10-core Intel i7 into a tiny, silent chassis. It's a CPU powerhouse for office tasks, but the integrated graphics mean it's useless for gaming or creative work.
The 30-Second Version
The Lenovo IdeaCentre Mini is a powerful CPU trapped in a tiny, graphics-less box. It's a brilliant specialist for office work, but a terrible choice for almost everyone else.
Overview
The Lenovo IdeaCentre Mini is a tiny desktop that makes a big promise: serious CPU power in a box the size of a paperback. And for the most part, it delivers. The one thing to know is that this is a specialist, not a generalist. It's built for one thing: cramming a 10-core Intel i7 into a silent, compact chassis for office work, media streaming, or light server duty. If you need a small, powerful brain for specific tasks and don't care about gaming or heavy graphics, this is your machine. Just don't expect it to be anything else.
Performance
The performance story here is all about the CPU in a tiny box. The Intel Core i7-13620H is a laptop chip, but it's punching above its weight class for a desktop in this form factor. In our database, its CPU performance lands in the 44th percentile—not a chart-topper, but perfectly respectable for a mini PC and way more muscle than you'd expect from something this small. The real surprise, though, is the GPU, which sits in the 25th percentile. That's the trade-off. You get a competent processor for spreadsheets and browser tabs, but integrated Intel UHD Graphics means this thing taps out at basic video playback. Don't even think about gaming.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- **Incredibly compact and quiet.** It's a whisper-quiet box you can hide anywhere. 80th
- **Strong multi-core CPU for the size.** The 10-core i7 handles office multitasking with ease. 73th
- **Loaded with modern connectivity.** Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2, and a USB-C port are all welcome. 69th
- **Comes with Windows 11 Pro,** which is a nice value-add for business users. 67th
Cons
- **Graphics are a hard stop.** Intel UHD Graphics means no gaming, no photo editing, no fun. 33th
- **RAM is a mystery and likely a bottleneck.** The 9th percentile ranking for RAM is a huge red flag; it's probably soldered and slow.
- **Not upgradeable.** What you buy is what you're stuck with, especially for RAM and GPU.
- **Weirdly pitched against gaming PCs.** Our algorithm shows it competing with towers it can't possibly match.
Specifications
Full Specifications
Processor
| CPU | Intel Core i7-13620H |
| Cores | 64 |
| Frequency | 2.4 GHz |
| L3 Cache | 24 MB |
Graphics
| GPU | UHD Graphics |
| Type | integrated |
| VRAM Type | Shared |
Memory & Storage
| RAM | 32 GB |
| RAM Generation | DDR4 |
| Storage | 1 TB |
Build
| Form Factor | Mini |
| PSU | 150 |
Connectivity
| HDMI | 1 x HDMI 1 x DisplayPort |
| DisplayPort | 1 x HDMI 1 x DisplayPort |
| Bluetooth | Bluetooth 5.2 |
| Ethernet | 10/100/1000Mbps |
System
| OS | Windows 11 Pro |
Value & Pricing
At $800, the value is... situational. If you need a compact, powerful, and professional-looking PC for a specific business or home office task, and you have zero need for graphics, it's worth it. If you're even remotely considering gaming, video editing, or future upgrades, it's a hard pass. That money buys a much more capable traditional desktop.
vs Competition
Our data weirdly lists gaming towers like the HP Omen 45L as competitors, which is laughable—they're in a different universe. A fairer fight is against other mini PCs like the Asus ROG NUC. The ROG NUC often packs a real GPU, so it costs more but can actually game. If you need graphics power in a small box, that's your move. Against something like a basic Dell micro-desktop, the Lenovo wins on raw CPU cores. But if absolute size isn't your top priority, a $800 traditional desktop from Lenovo's own Legion Tower line will run circles around this thing in every single metric except footprint.
Common Questions
Q: Can this thing run any games?
No. Not really. It has Intel UHD Graphics, which is fine for your desktop and streaming 4K video, but it's in the bottom quarter of all GPUs we track. Even old games will struggle. This is not a gaming PC.
Q: How fast is the processor?
It's a 10-core Intel i7 that runs at 1.8 GHz normally but can turbo boost up to 4.9 GHz when it needs a short burst of speed. For general office work and multitasking, it's plenty fast. The speed isn't the issue; the lack of a graphics card is.
Q: Can I upgrade the RAM or storage later?
Almost certainly not. Mini PCs like this usually have the RAM soldered to the motherboard to save space. You might be able to swap the SSD, but that's likely it. What you buy is what you get, so configure it carefully from the start.
Who Should Skip This
If you're looking for a general-purpose home desktop or anything that can handle light gaming or creative work, this isn't it. The integrated graphics are a deal-breaker. Go get a Lenovo Legion Tower 5i or a similar budget gaming PC instead. You'll get a real GPU, easier upgrades, and better performance for the same cash, even if it takes up more space.
Verdict
We recommend the IdeaCentre Mini, but only with a giant asterisk. This is a niche product for a niche buyer: someone who needs a lot of CPU compute in the smallest, quietest possible package and doesn't care about graphics. Think digital signage, a dedicated home server, or a ultra-clean office workstation. For probably 95% of people looking at a desktop computer, even a small one, there are better, more flexible options for the same money. Buy this because you have a specific problem only its size and CPU can solve, not because it's a 'good desktop.'