ACEMAGIC Unveils Its Ryzen AI Max+ 395-Powered M1A PRO+ Mini PC
ACEMAGIC is stepping into the high-end mini PC arena with the announcement of its first Strix Halo–based system, the MA1 PRO+, positioning it as the company’s most powerful compact workstation to date. This new model adopts AMD’s top-tier Ryzen AI Max+ 395 processor, making it one of the most advanced small-form-factor systems currently preparing to enter the market.
According to information shared on Weibo, the MA1 PRO+ shares its external design with the MA1 TANK 03, using the same decorative cube chassis. The internal hardware, however, takes a very different approach. While the TANK 03 pairs an Intel Core i9-12900H with an NVIDIA RTX 4060, the MA1 PRO+ relies solely on AMD’s new Strix Halo architecture.
At the heart of the system is the Ryzen AI Max+ 395, a monster 16-core / 32-thread Zen 5 processor featuring 40 RDNA 3.5 Compute Units. ACEMAGIC positions this Radeon 8060S iGPU as delivering performance equivalent to an RTX 4060 laptop GPU, which places the MA1 PRO+ in a unique category: a compact, GPU-less mini PC that can still drive demanding gaming and productivity workloads.
Despite the rapidly rising component costs for memory and storage, ACEMAGIC is moving aggressively with high-capacity options. The MA1 PRO+ will support:
Up to 128 GB LPDDR5X-8000 memory
Up to 12 TB total storage
These configurations will almost certainly command premium pricing, especially in today’s memory market. Connectivity includes expected next-generation features such as WiFi 7, though ACEMAGIC has not yet disclosed the full I/O layout, thermal solution details, or whether this model will support an additional discrete GPU.
Pricing and launch dates remain unannounced, but based on ACEMAGIC’s recent portfolio and the hardware inside, early estimates suggest base configurations will start above USD $2,000, with higher-end models likely pushing well beyond that threshold.
As adoption of Strix Halo spreads across handhelds and mini PCs, ACEMAGIC’s MA1 PRO+ is shaping up to be one of the standout premium designs heading into 2026.
Would you consider a high-end mini PC like the MA1 PRO+ for gaming or creative workloads, or does the pricing make a traditional desktop more appealing?
