Review cover Beelink GTR7 7840HS Mini PC (Hardware)
Official GBAtemp Review

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Beelink packs a huge punch in the tiny form factor of the new GTR7 Mini PC.

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It was only a few years ago when a "mini pc" either meant an underwhelming micro-ATX PC build, or a Raspberry Pi. As technology has advanced, and with the advent of AMD's new RDNA integrated GPUs, mini PCs have evolved leaps and bounds into fully-fledged tiny gaming boxes. Beelink has gotten a head start on this mini PC revolution, with their 7840HS GTR7 unit. Pushing this new Ryzen technology to its limits, Beelink very well might have one of the most exciting gaming devices out this year. 

Coming in four fun color patterns, the GTR7 is a tightly compact, incredibly well-built piece of kit. It has an all-metal case, which feels super solid and premium. On the top is a mesh vent, and if you pop that off, it'll reveal a chunky copper heatsink and fan to keep everything cool. Over on the opposite side, you've got the PC's RAM slots, which come with some power-packed DDR5 memory clocked at 5600MHz, alongside two M.2 NVMe slots, one of which is outfitted with a Crucial P3 Plus SSD, and the other is left empty to let you upgrade later down the line. 

Tech Specs

  • Color options: Green, Dark Blue, Space Grey, Hermes Orange
  • CPU: AMD Ryzen™ 7 7840HS Base 3.80 GHz boost to 5.10 GHz
  • GPU: AMD Radeon™ 780M 12 Cores 2700 MHz Frequency
  • SSD: PCIe 4.0 M.2 NVMe 2280 1TB SSD (extra slot for extra storage)
  • RAM: Dual SO-DIMM 32GB DDR5 5600Mhz
  • Wireless: WiFi 6+Bluetooth 5.2/2x 2.5G LAN ports
  • OS: Windows 11

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Included on the front of the case are a handful of useful ports: power, CMOS reset, a USB-A 3.2, a USB-C 3.2, and a 3.5mm headphone jack. Further I/O on the opposite side features two USB-A 2.0, another two USB-A 3.2, two USB-C 4.0, HDMI 2.1 and DisplayPort 1.4 for output, two LAN ports, and another headphone jack, giving you a lot to work with. As an extra bonus, the GTR7 also has a fingerprint sensor--a surprisingly useful and novel inclusion, assuming you're going to keep the machine within arm's reach. This mini PC has a wonderful assortment of I/O, with room to cram in all the accessories you could hope for. 

With how thick the heatsink and CPU fan are, you'd hope the GTR7 handles heat dissipation well, and it does--at least for the most part. Running it default out-of-the-box gives you solid performance and some great temperatures, given this is a mobile processor in a tiny box. After installing programs, fiddling with settings, and just general use, most of the components were sitting around 39C.

Alt-tabbing over in the midst of a session of Cyberpunk 2077, though, where the mini PC was being stressed, showed temperatures closer to 87C for the CPU, and a wildly shocking 98C for the RAM; that isn't something you want to see happen often. The 32GB of Crucial DDR5 offers seriously good performance, but I'm left uneasy by those operating temps. There is a fan located near where the RAM is situated, but it's moreso designed to cool the M.2 drives. And even if you wanted to cram some heat spreaders onto the RAM, it's a bit of a hacky solution, and a lot of extra effort and cost that you probably don't want to bother with, if you're already shelling out for a nicely pre-made mini PC. On the whole, everything else is cooled well, and even when it's at max load, the fans don't get too loud--it's really just the RAM that's a blemish on the experience.

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[UPDATE] Fortunately, the RAM problem has a solution: you simply need to update the BIOS to the latest version. According to Beelink, there are data reading errors out of the box. and in our testing, flashing the BIOS brought down the idle temps of the RAM to something much more manageable. Still hot, but not worryingly so. 

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In-game performance from the mini PC nets you great results. In a lot of cases, if you set it to 1080p/low, you'll get a solid 60fps--that's the case in Borderlands 3, The Witcher 3, Control, and Shadow of the Tomb Raider. Other games like Spider-Man, Cyberpunk 2077, and Elden Ring can hit 60 as well, so long as you're willing to mess around with FSR. The GTR7 handles emulation great as well, doing PS3, Switch, Wii U, 3DS, and 360 emulation without a hitch. 

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Coming in at $789.00, the GTR7 really does offer a premium-made product for a premium price. Having all this power stuffed into a small box is nothing short of impressive, especially when you consider how well the CPU is cooled. Being able to emulate even Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 3 titles makes the mini PC a fantastic emulation box, on top of the ability to play the latest AAA games at around 1080p. However, with the advent of the Asus ROG Ally, it feels like a lot of the novelty and niche of the GTR7 is covered by an even more portable device. Of course, you do get better performance than you would from the handheld, but the Ally is also lower-priced. On the other hand, you get tons of ports and the ability to output to multiple displays, and even use the GTR7 as your daily driver. If you're looking for a mini PC, I think Beelink has the ultimate experience on their hands--it just depends on if you're in the right market for such a thing. 

Official Store Page

Verdict

What We Liked ...
  • Great BIOS for tweaking/overclocking
  • Lovely case and lots of ports
  • Runs quiet and fairly cool overall for the form factor
  • Lets you get in there and upgrade it later down the line
What We Didn't Like ...
  • The RAM runs way too hot (now has a BIOS fix)
  • You pay a premium for the form factor
9
out of 10

Overall

Beelink's latest mini PC absolutely crushes it, making for a wonderfully small gaming and emulation box with some monster performance for the form factor.
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Why do things come with unfinished, garbage OSes preinstalled? Sure, it's not a huge hassle downloading Windows 10 and UPgrading to that, but it shouldn't be necessary if companies followed OS usage trends and continued preinstalling W10.
New is always better /s
 
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Why do things come with unfinished, garbage OSes preinstalled? Sure, it's not a huge hassle downloading Windows 10 and UPgrading to that, but it shouldn't be necessary if companies followed OS usage trends and continued preinstalling W10.
Sidegrade honestly, both OSes aren't great. If you're looking for games that only run or only run well on Windows, then sure, but Steam has gone a long way in terms of linux gaming, and Proton is one of the best tools for running games that'd otherwise only run on Windows.
 
Sidegrade honestly, both OSes aren't great. If you're looking for games that only run or only run well on Windows, then sure, but steam has gone a long way in the way of linux gaming and proton is one of the best tools for running games.
YEAH OF COURSE the linux fanboys had to come here!
 
Sidegrade honestly, both OSes aren't great. If you're looking for games that only run or only run well on Windows, then sure, but steam has gone a long way in the way of linux gaming and proton is one of the best tools for running games.
Is it even possible to run, say, Marvel's Spider-Man or AI: The Somnium Files, or WeMod, on Linux? Or, like, most of my library?
Because most of my Steam library (and other tools) is only compatible with Windows, hence why I'm running that.

Maybe I'll be forced to switch to Linux in late 2024/2025 once W10 is dead, but until then - and until I've had the time to experiment and see if most things are compatible or can be Proton-ed, so I can maintain my regular routine and stuff - W10 is the definitive OS for straight-up gaming.

I still prefer macOS over both in terms of ease-of-use and non-gaming activities, though. It's so visually clean, and I can easily find files in Finder compared to File Explorer, and the Hot Corners are an excellent utility feature (go to top-left to show all current-app windows; bottom-right to show desktop; bottom-left for all open windows - that's how I've got it set up. Top-right used to be the old Dashboard they annoyingly deprecated several versions ago; used to use that for handy calculators and unit converters and sticky notes. Since that's gone, though, top-right's remained unused).
 
Is it even possible to run, say, Marvel's Spider-Man or AI: The Somnium Files, or WeMod, on Linux? Or, like, most of my library?
Because most of my Steam library (and other tools) is only compatible with Windows, hence why I'm running that.

Maybe I'll be forced to switch to Linux in late 2024/2025 once W10 is dead, but until then - and until I've had the time to experiment and see if most things are compatible or can be Proton-ed, so I can maintain my regular routine and stuff - W10 is the definitive OS for straight-up gaming.

I still prefer macOS over both in terms of ease-of-use and non-gaming activities, though. It's so visually clean, and I can easily find files in Finder compared to File Explorer, and the Hot Corners are an excellent utility feature (go to top-left to show all current-app windows; bottom-right to show desktop; bottom-left for all open windows - that's how I've got it set up. Top-right used to be the old Dashboard they annoyingly deprecated several versions ago; used to use that for handy calculators and unit converters and sticky notes. Since that's gone, though, top-right's remained unused).
Spider-Man Remastered and Miles Morales work good enough to be rated fully compatible on the Steam Deck, if that gives a taste, alongside being rated gold on https://protondb.com which is the second highest rank for compatibility. AI:TSF is rated gold as well. To explain what proton is, it's a compatibility layer on steam that allows you to run just about any windows game under linux. The level of ability is dependent on the game but as of now, a great majority of games in the wider steam library run spectacularly. For example, I've played Persona 5 Royal on my Steam Deck for 60 hours and have experienced zero graphical glitches, slowdowns, or one-of-a-kind bugs.
The only thing listed that won't work, is WeMod due to it's nature on how it works.

You're free to test however you like if you want to see its capabilities, through dual booting or an old laptop you have laying around.
 
YEAH OF COURSE the linux fanboys had to come here!
Not a fan nor a boy, I just know it runs fast and what runs well on it. Which is a lot.

I don't think "Windows 10 also sucks" is super opinionated when it just... kinda does. Ever since Windows 7, which in my opinion was the last truly great version of windows, Microsoft has been shoving more and more ads, spyware, and general bloat, in the form of auto-installing Candy Crush, into each revision of Windows, which lowers performance, startup times, and end user experience.

Linux has zero of these problems at the cost of lower market share and not being user-friendly for the common everyday user. I don't think it's precious and perfect, I think it works, and surprisingly well for gaming.
 
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i would love to get one if i had the money but honestly the OS.....might just install holo on it (steamOS3) it has an amd apu so it'll work (hopefully)
 
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SteamOS is totally installable on it, which is nice. This is my first experience with W11, and I'm underwhelmed, but Windows is what it is at this point. I think it's fine to have default Windows, and just let users customize it with whichever flavor of Linux they like. I find this little machine to be the perfect complement to my Steam Deck tbh, and I have a handful of games that don't work on the Deck on the Beelink.

As to why it comes with Windows 11, presumably pre-built mini PCs like this are either ideal for noobs, or for people who like tinkering. The former are going to want the latest OS because that sounds best, and the nerds will just overwrite Windows anyway.
 
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It comes with Windows 11 because it's the latest OS, most consumers will see this and think oh it has updated software, must have nice hardware. Every company that puts out new hardware will have windows 11 and the newest OS.

Why would it make sense for a company to attempt to sell off a windows 10 device when the market would just think, oh it must have dated hardware because it has an older operating system on it.

These companies aren't going to go out of their way to develop an entire distro just on one product unless they want to double the price. I don't even think Apple did this back when mac minis were announced they just made macOS okay enough to run on Mac minis specific to hardware. However the nice thing is most of these SoC are 100% bootable to USB installers so to gripe about just the operating system is like buying a really nice house and hating the inside just because it's a certain color you don't like. I love these tiny PCs.
 
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