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The 16 core CPU is as fast as you'd expect, and the 40 core integrated graphics are quite capable of playing your games at 2560x1440.
But where it really excels is when you need 96GB of memory on your GPU. That would cost you $10,000 or more on a dedicated graphics card, while this entire PC is just $2000.
If you don't need 96GB of memory on your GPU, it's still nice, but you're probably be better off with a system with dedicated graphics.
It's not super fast, but it's a half-height, half-length, single-slot card with 8GB of RAM four mini-DisplayPort outputs, and it uses on 55W of power so it can draw all its needs from a standard PCIe slot.
That being the Achilles heel of the Nucbox. The Achilles everything, really.
Does it solve the problems?
Mostly, yes. The Nucbox has serious thermal throttling problems, while this model only shows throttling at the end of a long test, with default fan settings, and the CPU running at 100%.
The current model Hydra offers a four-core Intel N150 and 16GB of RAM. A model with an eight-core N305 and 32GB of RAM will follow. The reviewer does offer a word of caution if you hope to run all eight cores at 100% with the current cooling solution though.