PCWorld (USA)

Intel Dragon Canyon NUC12EDBI9: Small form factor PCS made simple

This easy-to-build gaming PC offers more performanc­e and fewer compromise­s than its predecesso­r.

- BY ALAINA YEE

Last summer, Intel leaned hard into its line of modular gaming PCS. Its launch of Beast Canyon ( fave. co/3l9x9v3) (aka the NUCBTM) muscled up into small form factor (SFF) PC territory, with an eight-liter case capable of housing full-length graphics cards. The only compromise—if you could call it that, given the strong test results—was its soldered mobile chip.

Half a year later, the release of Dragon Canyon eliminates that weakness. This Next Unit of Computing (NUC) variant doesn’t revolution­ize much. A new processor is the

star of the show: a socketed Alder Lake chip, plus some of the platform upgrades that come with 12th-gen Core chips. Otherwise, this NUC looks the same as Beast Canyon, thanks to sporting virtually the same chassis as its predecesso­r.

But we can’t say that it’s just a processor upgrade. Moving from a mobile chip to a replaceabl­e desktop CPU is quite a move. On paper, Dragon Canyon looks much better equipped to face off against a DIY SFF PC. And that’s exactly what we’re going to dig into in this article.

DESIGN AND FORM FACTOR

Dragon Canyon is actually the code name for the $1,450 NUC12EDBI9 and $1,150 NUC12EDBI7—INTEL’S official names for the Core i9 and Core i7 variants of this barebones gaming PC. The company sells it as a kit, which means you have to bring your own memory, storage ( fave. co/2z26gqg), and graphics card ( fave. co/3doeuwk). Everything else (the chassis, cooling, and proprietar­y power supply) is included.

Since Dragon Canyon and Beast Canyon share virtually the same chassis, the concept is exactly the same as before. Inside that eight-liter case, there are just two components to deal with: An Intel Compute Element module ( fave. co/3wyafcl) comes with the kit and houses the memory, storage, and a pre-installed Core i9-12900 or Core i7-12700 CPU. You have to obtain and install your own discrete graphics card, which can be up to two slots thick and a max of 12 inches long. The idea is that you can easily swap either of those elements for a newer replacemen­t down the road.

This Compute Element is the major upgrade in the system. (The chassis has the lone minor change—intel swapped one of the USB-A ports for USB-C.) The changes are all about cutting-edge tech and speed. Inside is a desktop 12th-gen Alder Lake processor with a completely different architectu­re from the previous generation ( fave.co/3cbahf5) and a GPU slot that supports PCIE 5.0. And at the

back, a second ethernet port capable of 10Gbps has been added. That speed may sound ludicrous to most of us in the US, but one Pcworld staff member is living the ultra-fast broadband life ( fave. co/3ttwzbd).

Because of that desktop Alder Lake processor, Intel promotes Dragon Canyon as upgradable to next-gen CPUS. They certainly are, but Intel doesn’t usually keep a socket around for more than a couple of generation­s. Realistica­lly, very few people will have reason to upgrade.

Serviceabl­e hardware is still a plus, though. And in theory having a desktop CPU means less of a compromise in performanc­e compared to a mobile chip. Let’s see how that plays out in the benchmarks.

HOW WE TESTED

Rather than try to tackle Dragon Canyon as an independen­t product, I chose to take a narrower focus. We already know how Beast Canyon stacked up—the short version is pretty damn well. (You can read the full details in our NUCBTMI9 review [ fave.co/3ijai8l] from last July.) That eliminates the need to pick apart

Dragon Canyon in fine detail.

Instead, the questions that Dragon Canyon raise are straightfo­rward: How much does it boost performanc­e in Cpu-oriented tasks? And how does it stack up against a similar DIY SFF PC ( fave.co/3l6p6io)?

To get a sense of the answers, we’ll look at a select handful of benchmarks. Think of these numbers more as a general impression of the hardware rather than as a set of performanc­e expectatio­ns.

THE HARDWARE LINEUP Dragon Canyon

Intel shipped us Dragon Canyon as a barebones kit this time, so we supplied our own memory and storage for our NUCEDBI9 review unit. For the graphics card, we used

the same compact Asus RTX 3060 that came with our Beast Canyon review unit last year.

CPU: Core i9-12900 (8 performanc­e cores + 8 efficiency cores, 24 threads)

GPU: Asus Dual O12G RTX 3060

Memory: 16GB Hyperx Impact DDR4-3200

Storage: 500GB SK Hynix P31

OS: Windows 11

As you’ll see, I couldn’t obtain the exact same SSD model as in our Beast Canyon unit. However, the numbers below show that using a PCIE 3.0 (rather than a matching PCIE 4.0 drive) in these particular benchmarks didn’t make a difference.

Beast Canyon

Our Beast Canyon review unit came fully outfitted. In the interest of keeping things as even as possible across the board, I used its compact Asus Geforce RTX 3060 with the other test systems.

CPU: Core I9-11900KB (8 cores, 16 threads)

GPU: Asus Dual O12G RTX 3060

Memory: 16GB Hyperx Impact DDR4-3200

Storage: 500GB Sabrent Rocket PCIE 4.0

OS: Windows 11

DIY SFF PC

While not an exact match for Dragon Canyon and Beast Canyon in size, this 11-liter system is still close enough to get an idea of how well the two NUCS stack up against a high-performanc­e DIY SFF PC. For the GPU, I again used Beast Canyon’s compact Asus RTX 3060 for consistenc­y.

CPU: Ryzen 9 5900X (12 cores, 24 threads)

CPU cooler: Corsair H100i (240mm AIO)

GPU: Asus Dual O12G RTX 3060

Memory: 16GB Hyperx Fury DDR4-3600

Storage: TB Corsair MP600

PSU: Silverston­e SX700-G

Case: Lian Li A4-H2O

OS: Windows 11

PERFORMANC­E Rendering

First up is Cinebench R23, the latest in Maxon’s line of 3D-rendering benchmarks. For evaluation of Dragon Canyon, this test provides insight into performanc­e during in Cpu-heavy tasks. The default setting loops the benchmark for 10 minutes, which is what we use for our tests.

Looking at multi-core performanc­e, you can see that going from Beast Canyon’s Core I9-11900KB to Dragon Canyon’s Core i9-12900 results in a nearly 50 percent improvemen­t. That bodes well for anyone

considerin­g Dragon Canyon. Still, the Core i9-12900 is a bit subdued within Dragon Canyon’s confines—we expected numbers closer to those of the Ryzen 9 5900X. In Cinebench R23’s single-core tests, however, Intel maintains its single-core performanc­e advantage, just as in full desktop systems ( fave.co/3fgvpfz). That bodes well for gaming performanc­e, as most games don’t take advantage of all available CPU cores.

Encoding

Our Handbrake test involves transcodin­g a 4K video formatted as an MP4 to an MKV file at the same resolution. This long-lasting encoding benchmark helps round out the Cinebench R23 results, as it provides further context for performanc­e during Cpu-oriented tasks.

Beast Canyon’s Core I9-11900KB performed decently in previous Handbrake benchmarks, though it was still surpassed by other mobile chips. Dragon Canyon’s Core i9-12900 decreases the amount of time by a hefty 30 percent, though as you can see, hardcore content creators may still find a DIY

SFF PC a better choice if time is money. The Ryzen 9 5900X chews through the file in nearly half the time of the Core I9-11900KB.

Gaming

Spoiler alert: When it comes to gaming, these three systems don’t give up much ground to one another on average. That’s not a surprise, since games rarely lean on all of a CPU’S cores. Instead, single-core performanc­e still often dictates outcomes. Game optimizati­ons can affect results, too. So if you’re primarily a gamer and were debating between the ease

of building in Dragon Canyon or more optimal performanc­e in a SFF build, you fortunatel­y don’t have a very tough decision to make at all.

Just have a look at the results from the benchmarks. These AAA titles still punish your graphics card more than anything else, which means your CPU plays less of a role in the final frame count.

Across the board, Dragon Canyon either matches or outperform­s Beast Canyon. The real competitio­n here is between Dragon

Canyon and the DIY SFF PC, and there’s no clear winner in the more recent games. In Metro Exodus and Assassin’s Creed Odyssey, the two systems are deadlocked, and in Borderland­s 3, the DIY SFF PC has a lead of 6 percent. That edge might sound meaningful, but that lead isn’t that much when you’re already getting 80 fps.

With some games, you may start to see more of a gap open up, as you can in Shadow of the Tomb Raider. But if they’re older or less demanding games (which SOTR is), it again may not matter much. It all depends on whether you need your framerates to be as high as possible, as you would for a high refresh rate monitor.

Acoustics and thermals

Like Beast Canyon, Dragon Canyon runs fairly quietly. In fact, the DIY SFF PC was generally noisier. Your choice of graphics card ( fave.co/3doeuwk) will influence your outcome, though.

It runs about as warm, too. During CPUintensi­ve tasks, like a 30-minute run of Cinebench R23’s multicore benchmark, Dragon Canyon’s Core i9-12900 averaged about 72 degrees Celsius. It crept up higher during gaming benchmarks—i often saw it hovering around 78 degrees Celsius. That’s not as optimal as some SFF enthusiast­s may like, but given its size and cooling, those numbers aren’t unreasonab­le.

VERDICT

Before Dragon Canyon, Intel’s gaming NUCS had an extreme niche vibe. You paid a lot for a cool, well-executed concept—and that was fine so long as you fit the narrow target audience. Otherwise, an alternativ­e was often a better and cheaper choice.

At $1,150 for the NUC12EDBI7 kit and $1,450 for the NUC12EDBI9 kit, you’re not necessaril­y saving money over a DIY SFF build, but you’re also not sacrificin­g performanc­e as with earlier NUCS that leaned on mobile chips. With its socketed chip, Dragon Canyon still retains that incredibly simple, time-saving system for building, while offering flexibilit­y closer to that of a DIY PC. That change makes Dragon Canyon feels like a solid option when considerin­g a sub-10l build, rather than a mere novelty.

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A look inside Dragon Canyon’s Compute Element.
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The Lian Li A4-H2O has a footprint similar to Dragon Canyon’s—it gets its extra volume from its height.
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 ?? ?? The Dragon Canyon is a solid choice when considerin­g a sub-10l build.
The Dragon Canyon is a solid choice when considerin­g a sub-10l build.
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