Is a NUC type PC capable of running Elite?

Is a NUC type PC capable of running Elite?

Obviously the higher spec ones.

Anyone tried it? Would need to run at 1080P / 60Hz.
 
"Intel® Iris™ Pro Graphics unleashes maximized performance for intense game play"

So: straight out no. Intel graphics does not play games; it will probably run the base game to some degree and crash before even reaching the main menu in Horizons. It's below specs for either.
 
"Intel® Iris™ Pro Graphics unleashes maximized performance for intense game play"

So: straight out no. Intel graphics does not play games; it will probably run the base game to some degree and crash before even reaching the main menu in Horizons. It's below specs for either.

Also all of the NUC's, apart from the very expensive top of the range Skull'thingy one, all use low power dual core CPU's (yes even the i5 and i7 ones), they will not play Elite at anything approaching decent graphic settings or FPS with those CPU's AND crappy Intel graphics!
 
Is a NUC type PC capable of running Elite?

Yes.

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Definitely
.

Elite Dangerous on the other hand, that's a bit more of a proposition :)
 
The Iris 580 in the Skull Canyon NUC outperforms the GTX 960m 2GB (which can play the game at 720p/high/60). So yes.

With an eGPU enclosure like the Sonnet, Akitio Node or Razer Core, you can even attach a full-fat GPU to it via Thunderbolt 3. You'll lose maybe 10-15% performance.

I think the Skull Canyon NUC is the only true quad-core CPU. There are others, but they run i5 and i7 -U processors, which are currently dual-core ULV designs that will choke on the game at 1080p and higher. The Coffee Lake -U processors are true quad cores, so they will handle the game much better.
 
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VideocardBenchmark did a G3D Mark test on the Iris (which is essentially a beefed up Intel HD 580) and it got 1,906.
By comparison the Radeon RX 480 got 8,118 and the 1080TI got 13,649.

So I guess you could .. but the experience .. urgh .. I doubt it would be worth it IMHO.
 
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Is a NUC type PC capable of running Elite?

Obviously the higher spec ones.

Anyone tried it? Would need to run at 1080P / 60Hz.
Anything can "run" Elite, but you need to lower graphics resolution / settings (and expectations) on less powerful machines. What matters is how much compromise you want to make and we can't answer that. Only you can.
 
No. I looked at https://www.intel.co.uk/content/www/uk/en/nuc/nuc-kit-nuc7i7bnh-brief.html and neither the CPU or not hte the graphics processing capabilities are not sufficient. You can find benchmarks of the Intel Iris Plus 650 chips here:
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Intel-Iris-Plus-Graphics-650.190370.0.html
While they haven't tested E:D you quickly see that 1080p is not doable for any game at decent performance. Notice how the settings are already low to medium, never high.

The CPU is a 28W TDP dual-core running at 4GHz tops but with that TDP you will likely have constant throttling. At that price point you essentially pay for the way oversized 32GB RAM which are expensive as hell right now and are a total waste for the low performance you can expect from the rest of the machine.

This thing is not meant for gaming. I'd personally not even use it for daily productivity office tasks as even a web browser will be slow.
 
No. I looked at https://www.intel.co.uk/content/www/uk/en/nuc/nuc-kit-nuc7i7bnh-brief.html and neither the CPU or not hte the graphics processing capabilities are not sufficient. You can find benchmarks of the Intel Iris Plus 650 chips here:
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Intel-Iris-Plus-Graphics-650.190370.0.html
While they haven't tested E:D you quickly see that 1080p is not doable for any game at decent performance. Notice how the settings are already low to medium, never high.

The CPU is a 28W TDP dual-core running at 4GHz tops but with that TDP you will likely have constant throttling. At that price point you essentially pay for the way oversized 32GB RAM which are expensive as hell right now and are a total waste for the low performance you can expect from the rest of the machine.

This thing is not meant for gaming. I'd personally not even use it for daily productivity office tasks as even a web browser will be slow.

It's funny because they actually advertise as a gaming machine. :D

https://www.intel.co.uk/content/www/uk/en/nuc/nuc-gaming.html
 
I haven't done it a lot but the game actually runs fairly well on my laptop, it has a decent processor in it but it's only running intel graphics so not the best there. I've been able to play the game somewhat stable at lowest settings using that.
 
I would say, not now but, definitely not ever. Given that Intel and AMD gave cut a deal for intel CPU/ AMD GPU hybrid APU's I would say that there is a very definite possibility of proper gaming NUC PC's in the no too distant future.
 
Thanks - it's not for me, it's for someone who wants a small NUC type machine in their lounge and was wondering if a NUC could cut it. They have a gaming PC in another room, but it's way too noisy for the lounge. I said I didn't think the current NUC's were up to it, and they'd be better building a HTPC machine with quiet fans or whatever.
 
I play Elite on my i7 laptop with intergrated Intel graphics all the time. It's not as great an experience as it is on my GTX 1080 VR rig, no...but it DOES work.
 
Thanks - it's not for me, it's for someone who wants a small NUC type machine in their lounge and was wondering if a NUC could cut it. They have a gaming PC in another room, but it's way too noisy for the lounge. I said I didn't think the current NUC's were up to it, and they'd be better building a HTPC machine with quiet fans or whatever.

If it's capabie of doing Steam in home streaming however with a decent enough connection it might be worth a punt.
 
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