HP Omni M02-0127c Black

Featuring an AMD Ryzen 7 8700G processor with Radeon 780M graphics and 32GB of DDR5 RAM, this tower handles demanding multitasking and productivity suites smoothly. Its wood-accented, EPEAT Gold-certified chassis and plentiful ports—including HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort, and dual USB-C—provide a sustainable, well-connected workspace. It’s best for business professionals and home office users who need a quiet, eco-conscious desktop for data-intensive work and multi-monitor setups with no gaming requirements.

★★★★★ 5.0 (1)
CPU AMD Ryzen 7 8700G
RAM 32 GB
Storage 1 TB
GPU AMD Radeon 780M
form factor Tower
OS Windows 11 Home
HP Omni M02-0127c Black desktop
79 Pontuação Geral
Também disponível em:

Sobre este Desktop

Featuring an AMD Ryzen 7 8700G processor with Radeon 780M graphics and 32GB of DDR5 RAM, this tower handles demanding multitasking and productivity suites smoothly. Its wood-accented, EPEAT Gold-certified chassis and plentiful ports—including HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort, and dual USB-C—provide a sustainable, well-connected workspace. It’s best for business professionals and home office users who need a quiet, eco-conscious desktop for data-intensive work and multi-monitor setups with no gaming requirements.

  • CPU AMD Ryzen 7 8700G
  • RAM 32 GB
  • Storage 1024 GB
  • GPU AMD Radeon 780M
  • Form factor Tower
  • OS Windows 11 Home

The 30-Second Version

The HP Omni M02 is a productivity powerhouse with a mountain of ports, but it can't game, and some units ship with baffling QC gaffes. If you need a fast, quiet office PC and hate dongles, buy it on sale and then double-check the spec sheet.

Overview

The HP Omni M02 is the desktop you buy when your to-do list is a mile long and gaming is something other people do. With a Ryzen 7 8700G, 32GB of DDR5 RAM, and a port selection that puts most towers to shame, it's a productivity beast for the price. But that integrated Radeon 780M graphics chip means it's about as useful for gaming as a calculator. So if you need to edit videos, juggle spreadsheets, and run a dozen browser tabs at once, this machine will feel snappy. Just don't expect to fire up Cyberpunk. The weirder story, though, is that a few buyers have found bizarre surprises in the box, like the wrong RAM or a Texas Instruments calculator manual. It's mostly fine, but the dice roll is real.

Performance

The 8700G rips through everyday work. Multitasking with 32GB of DDR5 is a breeze, and even 4K video edits don't make it flinch. In our database, the CPU sits in the upper middle of the pack, but combined with that generous RAM, it feels snappier than the numbers suggest. The Radeon 780M integrated graphics are the clear weak spot, landing in the bottom 11% of all desktops we test. You'll get smooth dual-monitor output and flawless streaming, but modern games are a slideshow. One pleasant surprise: this thing stays whisper-quiet under load, which is a rarity in budget pre-builts.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 72.2
GPU 10.6
RAM 78.6
Ports 96
Storage 56.6
Reliability 71.6
Social Proof 89.2

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Tons of ports: 8x USB-A, 2x USB-C, HDMI, DisplayPort 96th
  • Speedy multi-core performance for productivity and light editing 89th
  • 32GB DDR5 RAM right out of the box 79th
  • Quiet and compact with a clean, wood-trimmed design 72th

Cons

  • Integrated graphics can't handle modern gaming at all 11th
  • Quality control is a gamble (incorrect RAM, random manuals in the box)
  • Windows 11 comes loaded with bloatware
  • Small case and proprietary PSU leave no real GPU upgrade path

The Word on the Street

4.4/5 (144 reviews)
👍 Buyers love how quickly it powers through video editing and heavy multitasking—this thing chews up a to-do list.
🤔 The included wireless mouse and keyboard are handy, but the keyboard feels noticeably cheaper than you'd expect from HP.
👎 A worrying number of owners opened the box to find the RAM wasn't the advertised DDR5, and one even found a random calculator manual inside.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU AMD Ryzen 7 8700G
Cores 8
Frequency 4.2 GHz
L3 Cache 16 MB

Graphics

GPU AMD Radeon 780M
Type integrated
VRAM Type Shared

Memory & Storage

RAM 32 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 1 TB
Storage Type SSD

Build

Form Factor Tower
Weight 5.4 kg / 12.0 lbs

Connectivity

USB-C Ports 2
USB Ports 8
HDMI 1 x HDMI 2.1
DisplayPort 1 x DisplayPort 1.4
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 6
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.4
Ethernet 802.11ax Wireless LAN

System

OS Windows 11 Home

Value & Pricing

The Omni M02's price floats anywhere from $650 to $1,125 depending on where you look. At the low end, say that Newegg listing, you're getting a lot of PC for the money. At the high end, it's a ripoff. Our advice: if you can snag it around $650, it's a solid deal for a work-from-home rig. Anything above $900 and you should build your own or look at a Mac mini.

vs Competition

The Mac mini M4 is this machine's most interesting rival. It's smaller, dead silent, and faster in single-core tasks, but it starts with half the RAM and way fewer ports. If you live in USB-A land and need Windows, the HP wins on connectivity. For gamers, the iBUYPOWER Element and Lenovo Legion Tower 5i are in a different league, thanks to their dedicated GPUs, though they cost more and are chunkier. The Dell XPS and ASUS ROG G700 are also worthy alternatives if you want that premium build, but they'll punish your wallet even harder.

Spec HP Omni M02-0127c Lenovo Legion 90Y6003JUS Dell XPS EBT2250 ASUS Republic of Gamers GM700TZ-BS978 MSI EdgeXpert EdgeXpert-11SUS CLX Horus TGMHORRTU5106BM
CPU AMD Ryzen 7 8700G Intel Core Ultra 9 285K Intel Core Ultra 7 265 AMD Ryzen 9 9950X NVIDIA GB AMD Ryzen 9 9950X
RAM (GB) 32 64 64 64 128 96
Storage (GB) 1024 2048 4096 2048 4000 10048
GPU AMD Radeon 780M NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT NVIDIA Blackwell Architecture NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080
Form Factor Tower mid-tower mid-tower mid-tower mini mid-tower
Psu W - 1200 460 850 240 850
OS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home NVIDIA DGX OS Windows 11 Home
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortStorageReliabilitySocial Proof
HP Omni M02-0127c 72.210.678.69656.671.689.2
Lenovo Legion 90Y6003JUS Compare 97.888.196.790.383.871.679
Dell XPS EBT2250 Compare 8969.795.980.198.371.699.6
ASUS Republic of Gamers GM700TZ-BS978 Compare 98.877.194.497.791.24070.6
MSI EdgeXpert EdgeXpert-11SUS Compare 99.695.398.888.597.84084.4
CLX Horus TGMHORRTU5106BM Compare 98.888.198.69999.512.388.1

Common Questions

Q: Can this PC run games like Fortnite or Call of Duty?

Not really. The integrated Radeon 780M can handle older titles at low settings, but anything modern will stutter. This machine is for work, not play.

Q: Is the RAM actually DDR5?

It's supposed to be, but several users reported getting units with DDR4 instead. If you buy one, check the memory speed in Task Manager right away.

Q: Can I install Linux on it?

Yes, but you may need to update the BIOS first. Some folks ran into boot issues until they did that.

Who Should Skip This

If you're shopping for a gaming rig, skip this completely and pick up a Lenovo Legion Tower or an iBUYPOWER Element instead. If you want a tiny, silent desktop and can live with macOS, the Mac mini M4 is a much slicker machine. And if you don't want to play detective with your new PC's components, maybe look elsewhere.

Verdict

HP's Omni M02 is a capable, port-packed desktop that will demolish any home office or light creative workload. The only real deal-breakers are the integrated graphics, which rule out gaming entirely, and a shaky quality control track that might send you a box with the wrong memory or a Texas Instruments collector's item. If you find it for around $650, it's an easy yes for the non-gamer. Pay much more than that, and you're better off with a DIY build or Apple's latest mini.

Usage Scores

Overall (78.8)Ai Llm (27.1)Gaming (13.3)Compact (37.6)Creator (27.9)Business (83.4)Developer (76.6)Home Office (81.6)Workstation (65.8)

Produtos semelhantes