Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expired Posted by Dr.W • Apr 5, 2025
expired Posted by Dr.W • Apr 5, 2025

Prime Members: GMKtec Mini PC: Ryzen 7 PRO 6850H, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSD, M7 Oculink

+ Free Shipping

$347

$460

24% off
Amazon
120 Comments 89,763 Views
Visit Amazon
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Update: This popular deal is available again

GMKtec-US via Amazon has for Prime Members: GMKtec Small Form Factor Mini Gaming PC on sale for $369.99 - $23 clippable coupon = $346.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member Dr.Wajahat for finding this deal.

Note: You must be logged in to clip coupons; coupons are typically for one-time use.

Specs:
  • AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 6850H 8-Core Processor
  • 16GB DDR5 4800Mhz Memory
  • 512GB PCIe Solid State Drive
  • AMD Radeon 680M Integrated Graphics
  • Dual NIC Intel i226V 2.5Gbps + WiFi 6 + Bluetooth 5.2
  • Windows 11 Pro
  • Ports:
    • 2x USB 4 Type-C
    • 2x USB 3.2 Gen 2
    • USB 2.0
    • 1x HDMI 2.1
    • 1x DisplayPort 2.0
    • 1x M7 Oculink

Editor's Notes

Written by SubZero5 | Staff

Original Post

Written by Dr.W
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Update: This popular deal is available again

GMKtec-US via Amazon has for Prime Members: GMKtec Small Form Factor Mini Gaming PC on sale for $369.99 - $23 clippable coupon = $346.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member Dr.Wajahat for finding this deal.

Note: You must be logged in to clip coupons; coupons are typically for one-time use.

Specs:
  • AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 6850H 8-Core Processor
  • 16GB DDR5 4800Mhz Memory
  • 512GB PCIe Solid State Drive
  • AMD Radeon 680M Integrated Graphics
  • Dual NIC Intel i226V 2.5Gbps + WiFi 6 + Bluetooth 5.2
  • Windows 11 Pro
  • Ports:
    • 2x USB 4 Type-C
    • 2x USB 3.2 Gen 2
    • USB 2.0
    • 1x HDMI 2.1
    • 1x DisplayPort 2.0
    • 1x M7 Oculink

Editor's Notes

Written by SubZero5 | Staff

Original Post

Written by Dr.W

Community Voting

Deal Score
+78
Good Deal
Visit Amazon
Leave a Comment
To participate in the comments, please log in.

Top Comments

The dock doesn't need to be as expensive as the $100 MINISFORUM one others suggested. I got something like this off of AliExpress [amazon.com] for around $40-$50. Look for a BK7 (base and bracket), F9G (OCuLink to PCIe x16 board), and an OCuLink cable.

If anyone wants to try this with a (mini) PC without an OCuLink port, but with a spare M.2 slot, you can try looking for an adapter like a "F4C". This converts an M.2 slot, which is really a PCIe x4 slot, into an OCuLink port.

(I believe the BK7, F9G, and F4C are all made by the manufacturer "ADT". But you'll find a lot if listings on places like Amazon and AliExpress just list the model name. So just search for those.)
Nice theory, but are you relying on actual empirical data or just indulging in an economist's fever dream? The historical record doesn't support your claim. Your assumption—that companies consistently absorb the full (or even majority) cost of tariffs—is almost never reflected in the data. The only time that happens is under rare, ideal conditions: when a company must make a sale and has enough profit margin to absorb some of the tariff. Even then, they typically eat only a fraction.
In reality, study after study shows that consumers in the receiving country bear most of the cost. According to Amiti et al. (2020) and Fajgelbaum et al. (2020), U.S. consumers absorbed nearly 100% of the cost of the tariffs imposed during the U.S.-China trade war under Trump's first administration. Feng, Han, and Li (2023) found U.S. importers bore 93% of U.S.-imposed tariffs. The numbers are remarkably consistent across time and geography: under normal conditions, consumers absorb between 60% and 90% of the cost. That's the economic consensus, not a debate.
Happy to list more studies if you're actually curious:

Amiti et al. (2020) – Who's Paying for the US Tariffs?
https://www.aeaweb.org/articles?i...p.20201018
Fajgelbaum et al. (2020) – The Economic Impacts of the US–China Trade War
https://www.nber.org/system/files...w29315.pdf
Feng, Han, and Li (2023) – Asymmetric Tariff Pass-Through Between China and the US
https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/wh...ina-and-us
Hayakawa (2017) – Asymmetric Tariff Pass-Through to Trade Prices
https://ideas.repec.org/p/jet/dpa...er631.html
Bown & Crowley (2013) – Import Protection, Business Cycles, and Exchange Rates
https://econpapers.repec.org/RePE...:1:p:50-64
The last of the cheap PCs for a few years. Slick Deals are going to be slim pickings with all these tariffs.

119 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Apr 22, 2025
1,170 Posts
Joined Oct 2013
Apr 22, 2025
TochiT
Apr 22, 2025
1,170 Posts
Quote from edrock200 :
Volume is why. Selling one copy to a consumer is not the same. I've dealt with genuine volume sales of windows before. It's way cheaper to PC manufacturers. Either way it's easy enough to validate.

Either way, if Microsoft says validates the key and says it's genuine, what is your concern?

No immediate concern to to a customer. The chance of Windows becomes invalid seems low. Just to express my opinion about how genuine the Windows copy is. Passing validation doesn't necessarily prove it's genuine. Microsoft had revoked Windows licenses and told users they are victims of software piracy before.

Related Searches

Popular Deals

View All

Trending Deals

View All