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Origin PC Chronos review: A 4K gaming monster in a petite package
An RTX 3080 card makes this a high-resolution player.
Lori GruninSenior Editor / Advice
I've been reviewing hardware and software, devising testing methodology and handed out buying advice for what seems like forever; I'm currently absorbed by computers and gaming hardware, but previously spent many years concentrating on cameras. I've also volunteered with a cat rescue for over 15 years doing adoptions, designing marketing materials, managing volunteers and, of course, photographing cats.
ExpertisePhotography | PCs and laptops | Gaming and gaming accessories
There's lots of wide-open space in the Chronos, but no extra slots, typical of these small-form-factor desktops. The black box next to the CPU is the power supply.
Lori Grunin/CNET
The new Origin PC Chronos is one of those systems you feel the need to invent a performance metric for, like frames per second per cubic inch. Capable of housing up to an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3090 and overclocked Ryzen 9 or Intel Core i9 processors, this small-form-factor gaming PC punches well above its weight. It's not the most gracefully proportioned system, though, squat and chunky with minimalist illumination. And unlike the tall, slim MSI MEG Trident X, which uses the same motherboard, it looks like it should be able to accommodate more than just a single card.
8.2
Origin PC Chronos
Like
Fits a lot of power in a small space
Relatively quiet given its power
Surfaces don't get hot
Don't like
Really need to use the external Wi-Fi antenna
Like most mini-ITX motherboards, there's only one slot, occupied by the graphics card
This case is new for Origin PC and it's actually a bit smaller than before. We'll be seeing a lot more of these small desktops with 3080 and 3090 cards -- it's amazing how much power you can cram onto a corner of your desk these days -- and they're a perfect size for weekday-work-from-home-game-on-weekends people in a cramped space.
Like all Origin PC systems, you can pay extra to jazz it up with a custom paint or etching job. In this case, that's extra above the $3,225 of our test configuration (directly converted, about £2,530 and AU$4,585), equipped with a 10-core Intel Core i9-10900K, EVGA XC3 GeForce RTX 3080 graphics card, a total of 1.5GB SSD and 16GB 3.2GHz DDR4 memory. If you opt for the aluminum mesh side panels instead of the tempered glass we got, you can get a bigger CPU cooler and custom overclocking. The Chronos can be configured starting as low as $1,449 (about £1,135 and AU$2,060).
Origin PC Chronos
Price as reviewed
$3,225
Size
Mini ITX (11 x 7 x 15.5 in/27.9 x 17.8 x 39.4 cm)
Motherboard
MSI MEG Z490I Unify and Corsair SFX 750 watt PSU
CPU
3.7GHz Intel Core i9-10900K
Memory
16GB DDR4 SDRAM 3,200MHz (2 slots)
Graphics
10GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 (EVGA XC3)
Storage
500GB SSD (1 NVMe slot), 1 x 1TB SATA SSD; 1 open bay for 3.5-inch storage
Ports
6 x USB-A, 2 x USB-C (1 x Thunderbolt 3); on GPU 3 x DisplayPort 1.4, 1 x HDMI 2.0b, on motherboard 1 x DisplayPort, 1 x HDMI)
Networking
1 x 2.5Gb Ethernet, Intel Wi-Fi 6 AX201 (802.11ax)
Operating system
Windows 10 Home (2004)
There's a lot of empty space in the case and, of the Mini ITX systems I've seen recently, it's one of the easier to open and upgrade: there are thumbscrews on the back, the sides slide out, there's a pressure plate with outside screws holding the graphics card in place and there's a bottom slide-out filter tray. Everything's easily within reach, visible and accessible. The liquid cooling systems are pretty, too, but they can make quick swaps and upgrades a pain.
Watch this: Full breakdown of Nvidia's new RTX 3000 series (3070, 3080, 3090)
The Chronos has a Thunderbolt port in the back -- a nice motherboard feature since the RTX 30-series cards don't have USB-C connections like the 20-series did. I wish it had more connections in the front like the Trident X rather than the single USB-A, USB-C and audio jack, but at least you have a USB-C connector to hang a hub off of.
As with a lot of desktops, the Wi-Fi can be a bit sketchy -- the antenna locations frequently don't handle 5GHz signals very well -- and you'll definitely have to use the bundled external one. The antenna's base is magnetized, though, and it attaches more sensibly to the base than other's I've seen.
The i9-10900K processor in the Chronos isn't the fastest I've tested in a small form factor, though it does take the single-core-speed crown, if only by a slim margin in some cases. The Ryzen 9 3900XT in the Maingear Turbo outperforms it for multicore speed, which is in part attributable to the Ryzen's 12 processing cores compared to the i9's 10. (You can see how it measures up in the benchmark results at the end of this review.)
The lip on the bottom is a pull-out filter.
Sarah Tew/CNET
Surprisingly, the RTX 3080 isn't unambiguously faster than the 2080 Ti; it's plenty fast, but it looks like it's (unsurprisingly) optimized for Nvidia's own CUDA programming interface and Windows DirectX rather than Vulkan. That's likely temporary, though, since the 30-series cards have some new algorithms and architectural changes that software needs to catch up with.
For many games, though, it generally seems to be about 10-20% faster than the RTX 2080 Ti, its spiritual predecessor, and about 30-40% faster than the RTX 2080 Super, it's price-equivalent predecessor. Perhaps more important, though, those gaps increase significantly when playing games in 4K using DLSS (Nvidia's upscaling technology) in a way they never did in the 20-series cards, as well as 4K without it.
All this speed doesn't heat up the system's surfaces or overheat its components, but the hot air venting out the top does seem to raise the temperature in my room by about two degrees. Still, it's small enough that I might actually be able to squish a third monitor on my desk and fast enough to make it worth putting up with the heat.
Geekbench 5 (multicore)
MSI MEG Trident X8917Origin PC Big O (PS4 Edition)10138Origin PC Chronos10495Maingear Turbo12763Corsair One Pro i20012766
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance
Geekbench 5 (single-core)
Corsair One Pro i2001126Maingear Turbo1286MSI MEG Trident X1294Origin PC Big O (PS4 Edition)1307Origin PC Chronos1422
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance
Geekbench 5 (Vulkan)
Origin PC Big O (PS4 Edition)64522MSI MEG Trident X70806Origin PC Chronos87234Maingear Turbo91575Corsair One Pro i20091594
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance
Geekbench 5 (CUDA)
MSI MEG Trident X113155Maingear Turbo 154234Origin PC Chronos211130
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance
Cinebench R20 CPU (multicore)
MSI MEG Trident X4789Origin PC Chronos5927Corsair One Pro i2006197Maingear Turbo7025Origin PC Big O (PS4 Edition)7099Falcon North West Talon 20th AE7143
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance
3DMark Fire Strike Ultra
MSI MEG Trident X6181Falcon North West Talon 20th AE6631Maingear Turbo8435Origin PC Big O (PS4 Edition)10144Origin PC Chronos10509Corsair One Pro i20012979
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance
Shadow of the Tomb Raider gaming test
Origin PC Big O (PS4 Edition)91Falcon North West Talon 20th AE126MSI MEG Trident X130Corsair One Pro i200138Maingear Turbo143Origin PC Chronos164