Tuesday, November 8th 2022
Intel NUC 13 Extreme Sets New Standard for Mini PC Gaming Performance
Today, Intel launched the new Intel NUC 13 Extreme Kit (code-named Raptor Canyon) and Intel NUC 13 Extreme Compute Element, which combine to make the most powerful Intel NUC ever built. The NUC 13 Extreme features unlocked 13th Gen Intel Core desktop processors and space for new triple-slot, 12-inch graphics cards to unleash even more performance for enthusiast gamers and content creators.
"This year marks the 10-year anniversary for our impressive lineup of Intel NUC products, and the Intel NUC 13 Extreme (code named Raptor Canyon) is an excellent representation of how far we've come. Our first ever NUC demonstrated a breakthrough in the miniaturization of a small desktop PC into an ultra-small PC form factor. While much larger than our tiniest mini-PC, our latest Intel NUC 13 Extreme sets a new bar for how to pack stellar gaming performance in a form factor that is 70% smaller than a typical 50L gaming tower. Along with the epic performance you expect from an Intel NUC product, we also deliver exceptional product quality and feature density in a completely modular and customizable design," said Brian McCarson, Intel Vice President and General Manager of the Intel NUC Group.The Intel NUC 13 Extreme pairs an optimized thermal design with off-the-charts performance and never-before-seen features. The redesigned chassis optimizes airflow to reduce noise and throttling during intense gameplay and heavy workloads, all while maintaining the signature compact NUC footprint.
The modular Intel NUC 13 Extreme achieves incredible speed with up to a 13th Gen Intel Core i9 desktop processor with eight Performance-cores (P-cores) and 16 Efficient-cores (E-cores), 32 threads and up to an incredible 5.8 GHz max turbo frequency.
The NUC 13 Extreme includes all the additional features and connectivity gamers need, including:
"This year marks the 10-year anniversary for our impressive lineup of Intel NUC products, and the Intel NUC 13 Extreme (code named Raptor Canyon) is an excellent representation of how far we've come. Our first ever NUC demonstrated a breakthrough in the miniaturization of a small desktop PC into an ultra-small PC form factor. While much larger than our tiniest mini-PC, our latest Intel NUC 13 Extreme sets a new bar for how to pack stellar gaming performance in a form factor that is 70% smaller than a typical 50L gaming tower. Along with the epic performance you expect from an Intel NUC product, we also deliver exceptional product quality and feature density in a completely modular and customizable design," said Brian McCarson, Intel Vice President and General Manager of the Intel NUC Group.The Intel NUC 13 Extreme pairs an optimized thermal design with off-the-charts performance and never-before-seen features. The redesigned chassis optimizes airflow to reduce noise and throttling during intense gameplay and heavy workloads, all while maintaining the signature compact NUC footprint.
The modular Intel NUC 13 Extreme achieves incredible speed with up to a 13th Gen Intel Core i9 desktop processor with eight Performance-cores (P-cores) and 16 Efficient-cores (E-cores), 32 threads and up to an incredible 5.8 GHz max turbo frequency.
The NUC 13 Extreme includes all the additional features and connectivity gamers need, including:
- Support for up to 64 GB dual-channel DDR5-5600 MHz SODIMMs.
- Support for PCIe Gen5 x16 new triple-slot 12" graphics cards.
- Support for up to three PCIe Gen 4 NVMe SSDs (M.2 2280).
- Intel 2.5 GbE (i226-V) / 10GbE (AQC113) LAN.
- Intel Killer Wi-Fi 6E.
- Two Thunderbolt 4 ports.
- Six USB 3.2 Gen2 rear ports.
16 Comments on Intel NUC 13 Extreme Sets New Standard for Mini PC Gaming Performance
What's the benefit? A laptop cooling fan for 125 W CPU? SODIMM memory in a desktop form factor? Good luck.
The 12VO PSU and dual thunderbolt 4 is nice, but there needs to be more for the price IMO.
This thing is enormous, there's no "new standard" here, and if there was, it would be absolutely trounced by dozens of SFF cases like the NCase M1 or Dan A4 that beat it to market by 9+ years.
NUC is "next unit of computing" and if this were a unit of volume, the original NUC was 116.6mm×112.0mm×39.0mm = 0.51 Litres.
This overpriced, locked-down, pre-built, proprietary, Intel vanity project is 15L in volume, which means IT'S THIRTY TIMES TOO BIG TO BE A NUC.
This is closer to an mATX SFF as sold by Dell/HP/Lenovo etc - i.e. the most unexciting and underwhelming form factor on the planet. It's a proprietary board with proprietary risers, proprietary PSU, bugger all software support and Intel's history of miserable parts availability and tortoise-paced warranty handling. Buy it as a curiosity because you are bored and have money to burn, but don't say you weren't thoroughly warned!
Edit:
I just checked the dimensions of my HTPC. That's a Silverstone case which takes an MATX board, ATX PSU, has 3x120mm cooling fans, 1x5.25" external DVD bay, 1x 3.5" HDD, and 2x 2.5" SSD. Total volume, 21L. I can use standard motherboard, CPU, cooler, GPU, RAM, PSU, fans, drives. If I wanted a larger GPU I could swap to the Fractal Node 202 and downgrade to an mITX board in exchange for full-length GPUs up to 2.5 slots.
yep.
Normal, Underwhelming Compactness?
New Unnecessary Crap?