Asus VivoMini VC68V review

Cutting-edge tech pitched as a conference call hub

Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Performance

The VC68V aptly demonstrates the performance kick that Intel’s Kaby Lake chips delivered, with this easily being one of the fastest mini-computer systems we’ve ever tested. And it’s sobering to consider that this wasn’t the Core i7-5700 model.

Benchmarks

Here’s how the Asus VivoMini VC68V performed in our suite of benchmark tests:

Passmark: 3905

Passmark CPU: 8231

CPU-Z: 442 (single-thread); 1646 (multi-thread)

Geekbench: 4546 (single-core); 13431(multi-core); 19664 (compute)

Cinebench: OpenGL: 51.09 fps; CPU: 593

CrystalDiskMark: 3335 MBps (read); 1186 MBps (write)

Novabench: 1117

Atto:  3247 MBps (read, 256mb); 1181 MBps (write, 256mb)

Sisoft Sandra (kPT): 9.63

UserBenchmark (higher is better): 77

3DMark: Firestrike 968; Sky Diver 4513; Cloud Gate 7839

PCMark 8: Home 4085; Work 5111; Creative 5237

Some of these high scores should also be attributed to the M.2 NVMe drive, achieving more than 3GB/s read speeds and nearly 1,200 MB/s writes. That would be fantastic for many tasks, were it a little larger.

The maximum size of these M.2 drives is 512GB, limiting their usefulness in some respects, although you could put dual 4TB SATA SSDs in here easily, and stripe those with RAID 0.

The only aspect of this machine that truly lets the side down is the integrated Intel GPU (Intel HD Graphics 630). As each benchmark relating to graphics was completed, our longing grew for Asus to have put something with a bit more pep in here from AMD or Nvidia.

Without an option for discrete graphics, this machine’s potential as a video editing platform was undermined from the outset, when everything else about this unit seems perfectly aligned with that application.

Asus makes a great deal of the fact that this unit can drive three 4K displays at once, which technically it can. However, it can’t decode three 4K 60 fps streams simultaneous to each of those panels, because the Intel GPU wasn’t built to handle that level of workload.

Three 1080p or 4K YouTube stream playbacks on different screens – yes – but three 4K streams with Blu-ray UHD bit rates… Err, no.

In our tests, it struggled to keep the audio in sync on a single UHD demo file, never mind three at that quality level.

The integrated GPU isn’t a 3D gaming platform either, as you could probably guess, with low resolution and settings being the necessary experience with most games, predictably.

Final verdict

This machine is incredibly powerful. So much so that it makes many desktop systems seem feeble and unresponsive, and yet Asus is promoting it to use Skype!

Surely the company is kidding at this price?

Accepting that the business world can on occasion be irrationally niche, that doesn’t fully explain why this is such an amazingly engineered and specified computer supposedly relegated to doing something any cheap Chromebook can do.

We can easily think of a dozen great uses for this computer, and none of them involves demeaning it with Skype.

Mark Pickavance

Mark is an expert on 3D printers, drones and phones. He also covers storage, including SSDs, NAS drives and portable hard drives. He started writing in 1986 and has contributed to MicroMart, PC Format, 3D World, among others.