HP OmniDesk OmniDesk Desktop PC,AMD Review

The HP OmniDesk desktop promises modern specs but delivers mediocre performance. Our testing shows it's just a basic office PC, not the versatile machine it appears to be.

CPU AMD Ryzen 5 8500G
RAM 16 GB
Storage 512 GB
GPU AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme
Form Factor Desktop
OS Windows 11 Home
HP OmniDesk OmniDesk Desktop PC,AMD desktop
53.6 Score global

The 30-Second Version

The HP OmniDesk is a basic office PC pretending to be something more. Skip it unless it's heavily discounted and you only need a web browser.

Overview

The HP OmniDesk is a basic office desktop that's trying to look like a gaming PC. The one thing you need to know is that it's built for spreadsheets and web browsing, not for gaming or creative work. It's got a modern AMD Ryzen 5 chip and a discrete GPU, but our data shows it lands in the bottom half for CPU and GPU performance. It's a fine machine for a cubicle, but don't let the specs fool you into thinking it's a powerhouse.

Performance

The performance is exactly what you'd expect from a budget office PC, which is to say, it's fine for its job but nothing special. The AMD Ryzen 5 8500G CPU sits in the 43rd percentile, so it's slower than most modern desktop chips. The real surprise is the AMD Radeon 740M GPU, which is technically discrete but only lands in the 47th percentile. That means it'll struggle with anything more demanding than light photo editing or very old games. It's a 1080p machine for basic tasks, and that's it.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 54.2
GPU 54
RAM 52.7
Ports 57.3
Storage 32.3
Reliability 71.9
Social Proof 46.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Solid reliability score (76th percentile) for a budget system. 72th
  • Modern connectivity with Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.4.
  • 16GB of DDR5 RAM is a good starting point for multitasking.
  • The form factor is a standard desktop tower, so upgrades are possible.

Cons

  • The GPU is weak. Don't plan on gaming or video editing. 32th
  • Only 512GB of storage is tight in 2025 (23rd percentile).
  • CPU performance is mediocre, lagging behind most competitors.
  • It's marketed as an 'OmniDesk' but scores terribly for creators (47.3/100).

The Word on the Street

4.5/5 (4 reviews)
👍 A few buyers are happy with it as a simple, no-fuss computer for basic home office tasks.
👎 The most common complaint is the lack of power and storage for the price, feeling misled by the 'discrete' GPU label.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU AMD Ryzen 5 8500G
Cores 6
Frequency 3.5 GHz
L3 Cache 16 MB

Graphics

GPU AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme
Type discrete

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 512 GB

Build

Form Factor Desktop

Connectivity

Wi-Fi WiFi 6
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.4

System

OS Windows 11 Home

Value & Pricing

At $599, it's priced like a budget PC and performs like one. You're paying for the HP brand and a Windows license more than raw power. If this exact spec is on a deep sale under $500, it could be a decent value for a basic office setup. At full price, you can often find better.

599 $US

vs Competition

This sits in a weird spot. It's not powerful enough to compete with real gaming desktops like the HP Omen or Alienware Aurora. Compared to those, it's a toy. Its real competition is other budget office towers and mini PCs. A Lenovo Legion Tower with a last-gen Intel chip often offers better GPU performance for similar money. And if you don't need a discrete GPU at all, a modern Intel NUC or similar mini PC might give you the same CPU power in a much smaller box for less cash. The OmniDesk feels stuck between two better options.

Common Questions

Q: Can this PC run games?

Not really. The Radeon 740M is very weak. You'll be stuck playing older or very lightweight esports titles at low settings. Don't buy this for gaming.

Q: Is the 512GB SSD enough?

It's tight. Windows and a handful of programs will eat half of that. Plan on adding a second hard drive or a huge external drive immediately if you have lots of files.

Q: What's it actually good for?

It's good for being a basic computer. Think word processing, spreadsheets, video calls, and web browsing. That's its comfort zone.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a PC for gaming, video editing, or any kind of creative work, this isn't it. The GPU is a paperweight for those tasks. Go get a used gaming PC or a Dell Inspiron with a better graphics card instead. Also skip if you need lots of storage out of the box.

Verdict

We can't recommend the HP OmniDesk for most people. It's a basic office PC dressed in slightly fancier specs. If your needs are literally just email, web, and Microsoft Office, it'll work. But for that price, you should expect more. The weak GPU and small storage hold it back from being a good general-purpose machine, and its performance scores confirm it. Look at last-gen gaming towers on sale or a business-focused mini PC instead.