Triple‑4K output, solid Ryzen performance, and big bang for under $300 — with a few realistic limits.
Imagine clearing your cluttered desk and still running three 4K monitors — without a hulking tower or a $1,000 price tag. We get fed up with bulky desktops that hog space and ports; the real pain is finding something compact that doesn’t skimp on connectivity or everyday performance. The KAMRUI Pinova P2 promises exactly that: a Ryzen 4300U mini PC with 16GB RAM, 512GB NVMe, and triple 4K outputs — all for about $289.99.
In our testing, the Pinova P2 handled heavy multitasking, office workloads, and light creative work with surprising poise, and the ports + VESA mount make it ideal for cramped desks or small-business setups. It’s not a gaming beast — the integrated GPU limits AAA rendering — but for productivity, multiple displays, and future upgrades, it’s a compact, quiet, and very practical option.
Overview
We approached the KAMRUI Pinova P2 expecting a capable micro desktop that prioritizes connectivity and practicality rather than bleeding-edge graphics power. What stands out immediately is its combination of an AMD Ryzen 4300U processor, 16GB of DDR4 RAM, and a 512GB M.2 SSD in a package small enough to disappear behind a monitor. In our testing, that mix translates to a snappy everyday experience for office work, media playback, remote conferencing, and light content creation.
What’s inside and why it matters
The specifications matter because they define what you can realistically do with the box on your desk. The Pinova P2 ships with a 4-core/4-thread Ryzen 4300U (Zen 2), integrated AMD Radeon graphics, a fast NVMe SSD, and dual SO‑DIMM support for RAM expansion.
This configuration provides excellent responsiveness for multi-tab browsing, large spreadsheets, light video editing, and running multiple virtual desktop/remote sessions.
Design, size, and build
The Pinova P2’s chassis is compact (roughly 5.05 x 5.05 x 1.73 inches), making it ideal for desks with limited real estate or for mounting behind a monitor using a VESA bracket. The enclosure uses a silver finish and a redesigned internal layout aimed at improving airflow. The fan is tuned to remain quiet under typical loads, and we found the unit comfortable to run near our workspace without causing audible distraction.
Ports and connectivity
Connectivity is one of the P2’s strongest suits. Multiple high-speed ports and modern wireless options make it useful as a primary workstation, digital signage player, or conference-room PC.
| Port | Quantity | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| HDMI 2.0 | 1 | 4K@60Hz output for one monitor |
| DisplayPort 1.4 | 1 | 4K@60Hz support, high-color-depth capable |
| USB-C (3.2 Gen2) | 1 | 10Gbps data + DisplayPort Alt Mode |
| USB-A (3.2 Gen2) | 2 | Fast peripherals and external NVMe cases |
| Ethernet | 1 | 1 Gbps LAN for stable wired connections |
Display and multimedia experience
The P2 supports triple 4K output via HDMI + DP + USB-C (DP Alt Mode), making it rare in this size class for multi-monitor setups. If your workflow depends on several high-resolution displays—financial dashboards, design references, or live dashboards—the P2 covers those bases reliably. Built-in Radeon graphics are capable of smooth 4K video playback and offloading browser-based GPU tasks.
Real-world performance and use cases
We used the unit for a variety of tasks to get a realistic sense of daily performance.
Cooling, noise, and thermals
The compact case and revised internal fan layout aim for balance: enough airflow to keep sustained performance without generating distracting noise. Under light-to-moderate loads the fan is nearly inaudible. Under extended heavy CPU and video workloads temperatures rise as expected, but throttling is minimal thanks to the configurable thermal envelope. In short, this is a mini-PC designed more for consistent productivity than extended gaming marathons.
Expandability and maintenance
One advantage of this model is the ability to expand memory and storage. The P2 includes dual SO‑DIMM slots and two M.2 slots (one NVMe PCIe and one SATA M.2), allowing straightforward upgrades.
Opening the unit is manageable with basic screwdrivers, but internal space is tight; take your time and follow static-free best practices.
Setup tips and practical advice
Verdict — who should buy this
We recommend the Pinova P2 to home users, remote workers, small businesses, and educators who need a compact, connected machine that squeezes desktop-class productivity into a thumbprint-sized chassis. It’s not for people who need dedicated GPU power for heavy 3D rendering or AAA gaming, but for everything else—multitasking, multi‑monitor setups, media playback, and office computing—it’s an impressive little workhorse.
Quick pros & cons recap
We appreciate the balance the P2 strikes between capability, size, and price. For those who want a dependable, flexible mini desktop that can handle real-world workloads while driving multiple high-resolution monitors, this is a compelling option.
FAQ
Yes — the system supports triple 4K@60Hz output across HDMI 2.0, DisplayPort 1.4, and USB-C (DisplayPort Alt Mode). For typical productivity and video playback workloads it handles this well; however, pushing GPU-heavy tasks across three displays (like multi-cam 4K editing or GPU rendering) will stress the integrated Radeon graphics and may reduce performance.
The P2 has dual SO‑DIMM slots and ships with 16GB DDR4. You can upgrade the memory — the unit supports up to 64GB depending on the exact motherboard and firmware. We recommend matching speed and timings for best stability.
It includes a 512GB M.2 NVMe SSD and has a second M.2 slot that supports SATA or NVMe depending on the configuration. That means you can expand to multiple terabytes of storage with modern M.2 drives, which is ideal for local media libraries or large project files.
For light and casual gaming at 1080p the integrated Radeon GPU will suffice for many titles at modest settings. For serious 3D work, GPU-accelerated video rendering, or high-end gaming, a discrete GPU remains necessary. For photo editing and light video editing, the P2 performs well as long as you keep expectations aligned with integrated graphics capabilities.
In our experience the cooling system is tuned for quiet operation. Under light to moderate loads it’s nearly inaudible. During sustained heavy CPU/GPU use the fan becomes noticeable but remains reasonable compared with typical tower desktops; ambient placement and good airflow will help keep noise down.
Yes — the P2 is VESA-mountable and small enough to be discreetly attached to the back of a compatible monitor or mounted on a wall. This makes it a good fit for clean desks, digital signage, or kiosk-style installations.