I guess I need to look into what's a mini PC and cost.
Here is the Amazon bestseller chart:
Discover the best Mini Computers in Best Sellers. Find the top 100 most popular items in Amazon Computers & Accessories Best Sellers.
www.amazon.com
There are specials that pop off all the time in this section because it's such a competitive market. Almost all the the current bestselling shoestring budget options run on an Intel Alder-Lake N series processor from the 2023 Gracemont (N50, N95, N97, N100, N200) or 2025 Twin Lake (ex. N150, N250) families. This
N97 variant with 16GB of RAM and 256GB of storage just went on sale for $140 a few days ago. You can find 8GB RAM iterations for $125 or less even when not on sale. Typically they come with 256GB-512GB of storage. This is cheaper than what I'm seeing for comparable Raspberry Pi 5 starter kits on Amazon.
There is very little difference between the Intel N series processors as CPUs. The only exception is the weaker dual core N50 which you don't really see in any of the offerings on Amazon. The numbering is generally a grading referring to the quality of the iGPU built onto the chipset. The N250 alone throws a wrench in that:
- N50 ---> UHD 710
- N95 ---> UHD 710
- N97 ---> UHD 730
- N100 -> UHD 730
- N150 -> UHD 730
- N200 -> UHD 770
- N250 -> UHD 730
All but the N50 above are stronger as CPUs than the Broadcom BCM2712 in the RP5, and as far as the iGPUs shown above, even the least of these, the UHD 710, is stronger graphically. On top of that, not that it will probably matter for emulation, since most emulators are best on Vulkan, these days, but the Intel processors support Direct X natively (no Wine drivers required). So they would be superior for running less demanding Windows games, and take a lot less fuss. The most attractive offerings I'm seeing are N97 or N150 units.
I've never spent serious time learning about the RP and its competitors, but that would be my rough assessment.
*Edit* Oh, to give you an idea of the gaming capability of the N97 or N150, here is a video of a YouTuber showing off just that. One important thing to note is that he is using an ever so slightly more expensive variant that has LPDDR5-4800MHz RAM (GMKTec G2 Plus, $160) as opposed to the cheapest ones I highlighted that have DDR4 RAM (prob running between 2133MHz to 3200MHz). The RAM speed is a bigger deal than normal for gaming considerations because it's what the iGPU uses as video RAM, and in these lower performance chipsets, this becomes critical to gaming performance. As the YouTuber notes, it's worth it. FYI, I am seeing a unit with 12GB of LPDDR5-4400MHz RAM and 256GB storage for $138: