ASUS ASUS V500 Home & Business Desktop Computer Intel Review

The ASUS V500 packs a 99th-percentile Intel i7 CPU into a $640 office PC. It's a spreadsheet-crushing marvel, but its integrated graphics mean it's useless for gaming or creative work.

CPU 4.9 GHz core_i7
RAM 16 GB
Storage 1 TB
GPU Intel UHD Graphics
Form Factor Tower
OS Windows 11 Home
ASUS ASUS V500 Home & Business Desktop Computer Intel desktop
66.2 Puntuación global

The 30-Second Version

A CPU champion with the graphics of a potato. For pure office work, it's a steal. For anything else, keep walking.

Overview

The ASUS V500 is a weirdly powerful CPU trapped in a basic office PC's body. For $640, you get a 10-core Intel i7 processor that's faster than 99% of the desktops in our database. That's the headline. But here's the catch: it pairs that beastly CPU with integrated graphics that can't even run a screensaver smoothly. This is a machine built for one thing: raw number-crunching productivity, and it's shockingly good at that one thing.

Performance

The performance story is a tale of two halves. That i7-13620H processor is no joke. It's a laptop chip, but it's punching way above its weight class here, landing in the 99th percentile for CPU power. It'll chew through spreadsheets, code compilation, and video encoding without breaking a sweat. The 16GB of DDR5 RAM is solid for multitasking. But then you look at the GPU score, sitting in the 24th percentile. That's because it's just Intel's integrated graphics. It's fine for driving two 4K monitors for work, but ask it to render anything 3D and it'll tap out immediately. The 180W power supply tells you everything you need to know about its ambitions.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 98.8
GPU 31.4
RAM 50.8
Ports 66.2
Storage 63.6
Reliability 47.1
Social Proof 73.4

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • That 10-core i7 CPU is an absolute monster for the price. 99th
  • Excellent connectivity with 7 USB ports, WiFi 6, and dual 4K monitor support right out of the box. 73th
  • Includes a keyboard and mouse, so you're ready to go on day one. 66th
  • Compact tower form factor saves desk space.

Cons

  • The integrated graphics are a hard stop for any gaming or creative work beyond basic photo editing. 31th
  • The 180W power supply means you can't just drop in a powerful graphics card later without upgrading the whole system.
  • Storage is a bit confusing (512GB SSD + 500GB external) and not the 1TB SSD the headline specs suggest.
  • Uses laptop-style SO-DIMM RAM slots, which can be more expensive to upgrade than standard desktop RAM.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU 4.9 GHz core_i7
Cores 10
Frequency 4.9 GHz

Graphics

GPU UHD Graphics
Type integrated
VRAM 16 GB
VRAM Type Shared

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 1 TB
Storage Type SSD

Build

Form Factor Tower
Weight 6.5 kg / 14.3 lbs

Connectivity

HDMI HDMI
Wi-Fi WiFi 6

System

OS Windows 11 Home

Value & Pricing

At $640, the value is incredibly niche. If your workload is 100% CPU-bound—think data analysis, software development, or running a dozen business apps—this is a steal. You're getting near-workstation-level processing for the price of a mid-range laptop. For anyone else, even casual users, the lack of a real GPU makes it a tough sell when a more balanced pre-built isn't much more.

640 US$

vs Competition

Don't even look at the gaming desktops like the HP Omen or Corsair Vengeance. They're in a different league (and price bracket) for graphics. The real competition is other business towers. Compared to a similarly priced Dell OptiPlex or Lenovo ThinkCentre, the ASUS V500's CPU smokes them. But those Dells and Lenovos often have more standard, upgrade-friendly internals and better warranty support. If you need a GPU later, you'll have an easier time with those. The V500 is the performance play, but it's a bit of a dead-end upgrade path.

Spec ASUS ASUS V500 Home & Business Desktop Computer Intel 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 4.9 GHz core_i7 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) 1024 2048 4096 1024 2048 1000
GPU Intel UHD Graphics 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 Home Windows 11 Pro NVIDIA DGX OS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home macOS

Common Questions

Q: Can I add a graphics card to this later?

Technically, maybe. Practically, no. The 180W power supply is too weak for any meaningful GPU, and the case might not fit a standard card. Upgrading the PSU in these small towers is often a nightmare. Consider this a graphics-free zone.

Q: Is this good for video editing or Photoshop?

For basic Photoshop work, the CPU is great. For any video editing or effects work that uses GPU acceleration, it will be painfully slow. This is not a creative workstation.

Q: What's the deal with the storage? It says 1TB but lists 512GB SSD + 500GB external.

Good catch. The headline is misleading. You get a fast 512GB internal NVMe SSD and a slower 500GB external hard drive in the box. The internal storage is good but not huge. Plan to use the external for backups or media files.

Who Should Skip This

If you're even thinking about gaming, skip this. Go look at a budget gaming PC with an RTX 3050 or AMD RX 6600 instead. Also skip if you're a creative professional or want a future-proof tower you can upgrade. This is a sealed unit for a specific job.

Verdict

We recommend the ASUS V500, but only to a very specific person. If you need maximum processing power for office work, light development, or home server tasks on a tight budget, and you know you'll never need to play a game or edit video, buy it. It's a productivity powerhouse. For everyone else—students, families, casual users, or anyone who might want to play a game someday—the lack of graphics horsepower is a deal-breaker. Look for a system with at least a basic discrete GPU.