Key Points
- Khadas has unveiled a new mini PC, the Mind Pro, at CES 2026.
- It packs a powerful RTX 5060 Ti graphics card into a tiny, 0.43-liter case.
- The system is modular and can be paired with a graphics dock and an external display.
- The specs suggest extreme performance, but questions remain about cooling and pricing.
The mini PC startup Khadas, which recently made headlines as the first company to sell a Lunar Lake-powered computer, is back with a new batch of tiny but powerful machines. At CES 2026, the company showed off three new devices, with the star of the show being the Khadas Mind Pro, a mini PC that packs an incredible amount of power into a case that’s less than half a liter in size.
This little beast comes with a whopping 64GB of RAM, a 2TB NVMe SSD, and, most impressively, an Nvidia RTX 5060 Ti graphics card. This is not the first time Khadas has managed to cram a fast GPU into a tiny package, but the Mind Pro takes it to a whole new level.
The system is modular, allowing you to add to it to make it even more powerful. The Mind Pro can be paired with the “Mind Graphics 2 Dock,” which houses the RTX 5060 Ti and a bunch of extra ports, including HDMI, DisplayPort, and Ethernet. This enables the system to handle demanding tasks such as gaming or video editing that would otherwise be impossible on such a small machine.
Khadas is also releasing an external display, the “Mind xPlay,” that can turn the mini PC into a mobile workstation. The high-resolution screen features a built-in webcam and microphones and can also serve as a second monitor for other devices.
While the specs are certainly impressive, there are still some unknowns. The company hasn’t disclosed the type of cooling system the Mind Pro uses, which is a major concern for a machine with this much power packed into such a small space. We also don’t yet know the price.
The Khadas Mind Pro is expected to be available for pre-order on January 27. It’s an exciting new entry in the world of mini PCs, but whether it can break into the mainstream market remains to be seen.