The Framework Desktop takes everything modular laptop fans love and shrinks it into a mini-ITX tower. It’s small, sharp, and surprisingly capable, even if you can’t tinker with every piece.
Framework Desktop brings power to a tiny form factor
This 4.5-liter machine manages to punch above its size. Packed with a 16-core AMD chip and a capable integrated GPU, it doesn’t flinch at demanding tasks. Local AI workflows? Handled. 1080p gaming? Surprisingly smooth. This isn’t just a web-browsing box; it’s a compact workstation built to run.
And all of that comes in a case small enough to sit on a bookshelf without drawing attention until you look closer.
Expansion cards and swappable tiles add flair and function
Where this machine shines is its front-access customization. The faceplate features five expansion slots, letting users pop in ports, audio controls, or storage with zero tools. Above that, magnetic tiles add a dose of personal style or functional extras like wireless charging pads.
Here’s what users can customize:
- Front I/O: HDMI, USB-C, SD card readers, etc.
- Magnetic tiles: Skins, LEDs, or functional modules
- SSD access: Quick-swap tool-free bay on the bottom
- Wi-Fi antenna: Externally mounted for easy upgrade
Framework Desktop sacrifices some modularity for size
Not every piece can be swapped. RAM is soldered, and the mainboard is a single unit, making traditional upgrades trickier down the line. If you’re someone who likes to hot-swap everything, this machine might feel limiting.
Still, the design trades that flexibility for something rare: desktop-level performance in a system smaller than some shoeboxes.
A compact rig for builders who like personality
It’s not a generic box. From the walnut front panels to the color-custom expansion cards, this machine gives off serious boutique PC energy. It feels made for people who want control over how their rig looks and works without needing a full tower and an afternoon with a screwdriver.
Framework Desktop signals a smarter direction for small PCs
This isn’t a device for everyone. You won’t max out triple-A titles at 4K, and you won’t find multiple PCIe slots inside. But if you want a powerful, personal, ultra-compact system that respects both performance and aesthetics, the Framework Desktop hits a smart middle ground.
{{user}} {{datetime}}
{{text}}