Zotac Shakes Up the Mini PC Market: Magnus EN75060TC Packs RTX 5060 Ti and 96GB RAM in a Tiny Beast
 


June 1, 2025 — Zotac just dropped a bombshell for compact computing enthusiasts. The newly unveiled Magnus EN75060TC mini PC crams desktop-grade power into a chassis smaller than a textbook, headlined by NVIDIA’s unreleased RTX 5060 Ti GPU and support for up to a staggering 96GB of RAM. This isn’t just an incremental upgrade—it’s a statement that mini PCs can now rival full-sized gaming and creative workstations.

Pocket-Sized Powerhouse

The specs sheet reads like a dream for power users:

  • GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 Ti (unconfirmed specs, but rumored 16GB GDDR7 VRAM)
  • CPU: Up to Intel Core i7-14700H (14 cores, 20 threads)
  • RAM: Dual-channel DDR5 SO-DIMM slots, expandable to 96GB
  • Storage: Dual PCIe Gen 4 M.2 slots + 2.5" SATA bay
  • Ports: Thunderbolt™ 4, HDMI 2.1, 2.5G Ethernet, Wi-Fi 7
  • Cooling: Vapor chamber + triple-fan design (a first for Zotac’s Magnus series)

Zotac’s engineering team pulled off the impossible here. The RTX 5060 Ti—expected to outperform the RTX 4070—is cooled efficiently in a 2.5L footprint. That means 1440p gaming at 100+ FPS, AI model training, or 4K video editing without a hulking tower.

Who’s It For?

  • Pro Gamers: LAN party enthusiasts finally get a portable rig that doesn’t sacrifice frames.
  • Creators: Edit 8K footage or render 3D scenes with 96GB RAM headroom.
  • Hybrid Workers: Dock it for productivity, undock for VR or content creation.

Early testers praise the "whisper-quiet" acoustics under load, a feat achieved through patented "IceStorm 3.0" cooling. The chassis also features tool-less access for RAM/SSD upgrades—a nod to tinkerers.

Pricing and Availability

While Zotac hasn’t announced MSRPs, industry insiders expect the barebone model (no RAM/SSD) to start around $1,299. Fully loaded 96GB/8TB configurations could hit $2,500.

👉 Where to Learn More:

The Verdict

Zotac’s Magnus EN75060TC blurs the line between niche mini PCs and mainstream desktops. With next-gen graphics, unprecedented RAM capacity, and future-proofed I/O, it challenges giants like Intel NUC and ASUS ROG. If specs hold up in reviews, this could be the "desktop killer" compact fans have waited for.

Stay tuned for hands-on tests as units ship in late July.




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