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CyberPower Zeus Mini

 & Brian Westover Principal Writer, Hardware

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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The CyberPower Zeus Mini offers outsized gaming performance in a tiny PC, and this console-sized desktop is also relatively affordable. - Desktops
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

The CyberPower Zeus Mini offers outsized gaming performance in a tiny PC, and this console-sized desktop is also relatively affordable.

Pros & Cons

    • Small-form-factor design fits almost anywhere.
    • Powerful components across the board.
    • Category-leading performance in gaming and everything else.
    • Limited expansion room.
    • Hard to get into for maintenance or repairs.

CyberPower Zeus Mini Specs

All-in-One Screen Type 0
Graphics Card Nvidia GeForce GTX 780
Operating System Windows 8.1
Optical Drive Dual-Layer DVD+/-RW
Processor Intel Core i7-4770K
Processor Speed 3.5
RAM (as Tested) 16

We've seen plenty of console-sized gaming desktops in the last few years, as companies try to convert console gamers raised on PlayStation and Xbox to the ranks of PC gamers. These smaller gaming rigs, unfortunately, have usually left us wanting in terms of performance. Now, the CyberPower Zeus Mini ($1,825, as tested) is here to throw all that out the window. This pint-sized PC packs a punch, with a small form factor (SFF) chassis packed with components built for maximum performance and overclocking. There's not much room for upgrades and maintenance, but this is one gaming PC that won't be showing its age anytime soon. With its compact size, moderate price, and outsized performance, the Zeus Mini is our new Editors' Choice for midrange gaming desktops.

Design and Features
The chassis has an angular front panel and a black paint job, accented with bright-green, chevron-shaped cooling vents. Glowing green LEDs inside the chassis put a positively verdant spin on the otherwise all-black tower. The SFF design isn't just a compact housing for a gaming PC; it's also meant to take aim at consoles, with a chassis that can be used upright like a regular PC tower, or horizontal and incorporated into a home entertainment setup.

The front of the chassis features two USB ports (one USB 3.0, one USB 2.0), jacks for headphones and mic, and a slot-loading optical drive (DVD±R/RW with dual-layer support). A small power button on the top edge of the panel glows green when the system is powered on.

On the rear of the small tower are six additional USB portsCyberPower Zeus Mini - Rear Panel
(two USB 2.0, four USB 3.0), two Gigabit Ethernet ports, audio connections for external speakers, and S/PDIF output for digital 7.1 channel surround sound. There are also ports for HDMI and DVI on the main panel, but these have been disabled; coming off of the graphics card, however, are two DVI-D connections and outputs for HDMI and DisplayPort.

Open up the side of the Zeus Mini, and you'll be greeted with a very crowded tower. Given that it measures only 13 by 4.4 by 17.4 inches (HWD), the design is actually quite economical in the use of interior space, but it makes for cramped conditions. Even if there were any available PCIe slots or SATA ports, the small confines of the case don't leave much room for upgrades, and the radiator and cooling fan block most of the access to the motherboard.

Behind a cooling fan, you'll catch glimpses of a Gigabyte Z87N mini ITX motherboard equipped with an Intel Core i7-4770K and a Cooler Master Seidon 120mm liquid cooling system. A riser card connects to a discrete GPU, but the way it's positioned in the case, you'll need to remove it to access the front of the card. On one side of the motherboard are two slots filled with 16GB of 1600MHz dual-channel DDR3 RAM—G.SKILL Ripjaws X, made for performance in overclocking—and SATA ports are all filled, connecting to a 120GB solid-state drive (SSD) boot drive, and a 2TB, 7,200rpm hard drive for storage.

CyberPower Zeus Mini - Open

Our review unit came with Windows 8.1 preinstalled, along with Nvidia's GeForce experience, which handles all of the driver updates, and provides features like ShadowPlay (for recording in-game content) and GameCast for enjoying the games on your PC through an Nvidia Shield. The only other bundled software is a 30-day trial of Microsoft Office 365.

CyberPower covers the Zeus Mini with a three-year warranty (one year on parts, three years on labor), along with lifetime tech support. Also, for those interested in making the most of the Zeus Mini's overclocking capabilities, you can add Intel's Performance Tuning Protection Plan for $29, which covers the CPU in case of damage while tweaking performance beyond stock specifications.

Performance
CyberPower Zeus Mini With an Intel Core i7-4770K quad-core CPU, made to be overclocked beyond the default 3.5GHz, and paired with 16GB of high-performance dual-channel DRAM, the Zeus Mini is built for performance, and it delivered. In PCMark 7, the Zeus Mini scored 6,710 points, several hundred points ahead of most competitors, and pulling ahead of the category-leading Velocity Micro Edge Z30 SmallBlock (6,657 points) by a narrow margin. It also landed toward the front of the pack in Cinebench, scoring 8.59 points, only coming behind the overclocked Maingear Potenza Super Stock (9.57 points). Performance is also superb in multimedia tests, where the Zeus Mini completed Handbrake in 28 seconds (tying the Digital Storm Bolt), and nearly offered the fastest time in Photoshop, completing the test in 2 minutes 48 seconds.

But where the Zeus Mini really trounced competitors was in graphics and gaming performance, thanks to an EVGA GeForce GTX 780 Superclocked GPU. It allowed the small gaming rig to nab top scores in 3DMark 11—15,614 points at Entry settings and 4,672 points at Extreme settings—and the best gaming performance in the midrange category. In Alien vs. Predator, the Zeus Mini produced 237 frames per second (fps) at 1,355-by-768 resolution and moderate detail settings, and 84fps at 1,920-by-1,080 resolution and high detail. Similar performance was seen in Heaven, where the Zeus Mini pumped out 181fps at 1,366-by-768 baseline, and 74fps at full resolution and detail. All of these results were well ahead of similarly priced competitors, making the Zeus Mini the best midrange SFF machine for gaming.

Conclusion
With awesome test scores and a collection of parts made to be pushed to the limit, the CyberPower Zeus Mini uses every inch of its tiny size to provide the best gaming experience possible. While the lack of room for upgrades will definitely bum out the PC tinkerers out there, the performance speaks for itself, launching it ahead of comparable midrange SFF gaming rigs. With all that power selling for such a reasonable price, the CyberPower Zeus Mini is the pint-sized PC to beat, replacing the Maingear Potenza Super Stock as our Editors' Choice for midrange gaming desktops.

Final Thoughts

The CyberPower Zeus Mini offers outsized gaming performance in a tiny PC, and this console-sized desktop is also relatively affordable. - Desktops

CyberPower Zeus Mini

4.0 Excellent

The CyberPower Zeus Mini offers outsized gaming performance in a tiny PC, and this console-sized desktop is also relatively affordable.

About Our Expert

Brian Westover

Brian Westover

Principal Writer, Hardware

My Experience

From the laptops on your desk to satellites in space and AI that seems to be everywhere, I cover many topics at PCMag. I've covered PCs and technology products for over 15 years at PCMag and other publications, among them Tom's Guide, Laptop Mag, and TWICE. As a hardware reviewer, I've handled dozens of MacBooks, 2-in-1 laptops, Chromebooks, and the latest AI PCs. As the resident Starlink expert, I've done years of hands-on testing with the satellite service. I also explore the most valuable ways to use the latest AI tools and features in our Try AI column.

The Technology I Use

Between the Starlink dish on my roof and the laptop or desktop I'm using right now, I've always got a new tech product in front of me. I have five or six laptops in rotation at any moment, along with a couple of mini PCs, two smart TVs, and a couple of Chromebooks for good measure.

Everything is connected via Starlink, using the latest Dish V4 and Gen 3 Router, letting me live my tech-centric life in rural Idaho.

When I'm not testing and reviewing products, I'm probably using one of a dozen AI tools for everything from work and productivity to entertainment and saving some money.

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