HP EliteDesk HP EliteDesk 800 G1 Tower Desktop Computer PC, Review

This $467 tower pairs 32GB of RAM with a 10-year-old CPU. It's a budget option that makes serious compromises, especially for gaming.

CPU i5-4570
RAM 32 GB
Storage 512 GB
GPU NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti
Form Factor Tower
HP EliteDesk HP EliteDesk 800 G1 Tower Desktop Computer PC, desktop
42.2 Punteggio Complessivo

The 30-Second Version

For $467, you get a tower with a cripplingly old CPU (19th percentile) but a huge 32GB of RAM. The GTX 1050 Ti GPU (44th percentile) allows for light gaming. It's a budget stopgap with zero upgrade headroom. Only consider if your budget is set in stone and your needs are minimal.

Overview

The HP EliteDesk 800 G1 is a $467 tower that's trying to be a lot of things at once. It's built on a 10-year-old Intel Core i5-4570 CPU, which lands in the 19th percentile for performance, but it's paired with a surprisingly generous 32GB of DDR3 RAM, putting it in the 71st percentile for memory. The result is a machine with a serious identity crisis: is it a budget gaming rig, a home office workhorse, or just a refurbished business PC with some new parts? Let's dig into the numbers. It comes with a 512GB SSD and a 1TB HDD, though that combo only scores in the 30th percentile for storage against modern desktops. The discrete NVIDIA GTX 1050 Ti GPU is a step up from integrated graphics, but at the 44th percentile, it's not exactly a powerhouse. This is a spec sheet from different eras.

Performance

Performance is a story of mismatched parts. The CPU is the clear bottleneck, sitting in the 19th percentile. That i5-4570 is a quad-core chip from 2013, and it shows. For basic tasks and light multi-tasking, the 32GB of RAM will keep things smooth, but any CPU-intensive work will hit a wall fast. The GPU, an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti, is better, landing in the 44th percentile. It can handle esports titles like League of Legends or CS:GO at decent settings, but modern AAA games at 1080p will be a struggle. The storage setup is practical—a 512GB SSD for your OS and key apps, plus a 1TB HDD for bulk files—but its 30th percentile ranking shows it's just average by today's standards.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 27.5
GPU 52.3
RAM 68.6
Ports 18.8
Storage 39.7
Reliability 74
Social Proof 23.8

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Massive 32GB of DDR3 RAM (71st percentile) means you can have a hundred browser tabs open without a hiccup. 74th
  • Includes a discrete GTX 1050 Ti GPU (44th percentile), which is a huge step up from integrated graphics for light gaming. 69th
  • Practical dual-storage setup with a 512GB SSD for speed and a 1TB HDD for capacity.
  • High reliability score at the 78th percentile suggests this refurbished business PC is built to last.
  • Very low price point of $467 for a full tower system with a dedicated GPU and lots of RAM.

Cons

  • Aging Intel Core i5-4570 CPU is a major bottleneck, ranking in the dismal 19th percentile. 19th
  • GTX 1050 Ti GPU is dated and only in the 44th percentile, limiting gaming to older or less demanding titles. 24th
  • DDR3 RAM is old technology, limiting potential upgrade paths and overall system bandwidth. 28th
  • Storage combo only hits the 30th percentile, being outpaced by modern NVMe drives.
  • Port selection is weak (22nd percentile), likely lacking modern USB-C or high-speed ports.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU i5-4570

Graphics

GPU 1050 Ti
Type discrete
VRAM 4 GB
VRAM Type GDDR5

Memory & Storage

RAM 32 GB
RAM Generation DDR3
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type SSD

Build

Form Factor Tower

Value & Pricing

At $467, the value proposition is entirely about upfront cost versus modern performance. You're getting a complete system with a dedicated GPU and a ton of RAM for less than the price of a new mid-range graphics card alone. However, you're paying with performance, especially on the CPU side. It's a trade-off: save hundreds of dollars now, but accept that this PC is already operating at the lower end of today's performance spectrum and has very limited upgrade potential without replacing the core platform (motherboard, CPU, RAM).

467 USD

vs Competition

Stacked against its listed competitors, the EliteDesk is in a different league—a much slower one. The HP Omen 45L or Dell Alienware Aurora R16 will have modern CPUs and GPUs that are multiple generations ahead, offering 5-10x the gaming performance for 3-4x the price. A more direct comparison might be a modern budget gaming PC or a mini-PC with a recent Ryzen APU. Something like an ASUS ROG NUC with an Intel Core Ultra CPU would run circles around this EliteDesk in CPU tasks and likely match or beat its GPU performance with integrated graphics, all in a tiny form factor. The EliteDesk's only advantage is its sheer amount of cheap DDR3 RAM and its rock-bottom price.

Spec HP EliteDesk HP EliteDesk 800 G1 Tower Desktop Computer PC, 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 i5-4570 Intel Core Ultra 7 265K NVIDIA GB Intel Core Ultra 7 265 AMD Ryzen 7 7700X Apple M3 Ultra
RAM (GB) 32 32 128 32 32 96
Storage (GB) 512 2048 4096 1024 2048 1000
GPU NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 NVIDIA NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Apple M3 Ultra 60-core
Form Factor Tower Desktop Mini Tower Tower -
Psu W - 850 240 750 850 -
OS - Windows 11 Pro NVIDIA DGX OS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home macOS
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare

Common Questions

Q: How much storage does it really have?

It has a 512GB solid-state drive (SSD) for your operating system and programs, plus a separate 1TB hard disk drive (HDD) for storing larger files like games, videos, and photos. While practical, this combo only scores in the 30th percentile against current desktops, as many now use faster, larger NVMe SSDs.

Q: Is the GTX 1050 Ti good for gaming?

It's okay for light gaming. The GTX 1050 Ti 4GB sits in the 44th percentile for GPU performance. You can expect to play older AAA titles or popular esports games like Fortnite, Valorant, or CS:GO at 1080p with medium-to-low settings. It won't handle newer, demanding games well at all.

Q: Can this PC be upgraded later?

Upgrade options are very limited. The CPU is on an old socket, the RAM is DDR3, and the power supply in these business towers is often basic. You could swap the GPU or add more storage, but to meaningfully improve CPU performance, you'd need a new motherboard, CPU, and DDR4 or DDR5 RAM—essentially building a new PC.

Who Should Skip This

Gamers should look elsewhere. With a GPU in the 44th percentile and a CPU in the 19th, this isn't a gaming machine. Anyone doing CPU-intensive work like video editing, streaming, or software development will find the i5-4570 painfully slow. Also, skip this if you want a small PC—it scores a 23.9/100 for compactness. If you have any flexibility in a $500-$700 budget, you can build or buy a much more capable modern system.

Verdict

This is a tough one to recommend broadly. The data is clear: the ancient CPU cripples the system's potential. If your needs are strictly defined—light office work, web browsing, and very casual gaming—and your budget is absolutely capped at $500, this gets you a working tower. But for almost anyone else, especially considering gaming or home office scores in the 40s, saving a bit more for a modern platform with a Ryzen 5 or Core i3 will provide a dramatically better experience and a viable upgrade path. This PC is a dead end.