Erying dropped new MoDT motherboards that stick Intel Core Ultra 200H mobile chips onto desktop boards, ranging from the 225H up to the flagship 285H with 16 cores pushing 5.4 GHz. These boards let budget builders grab laptop silicon running at 120W instead of the usual mobile power limits, paired with better cooling than any notebook could handle. The mATX design packs dual DDR5 slots supporting 128 GB at 5600 speeds, a couple of M.2 slots, and basic expansion through PCIe 4.0 lanes.
Pricing starts under $140 for entry models, while the top-tier 285H setup lands around $300, which beats traditional desktop chip and board combos by a solid margin. The Arc 140T integrated graphics got a massive boost over last gen, and Erying even showed the system paired with an RTX 4070 running Cyberpunk without breaking a sweat. Mobile on desktop boards appeal mostly to internet cafe setups and first-time PC builders chasing value over upgrade paths, since the BGA-mounted chips stay soldered permanently.
Pricing starts under $140 for entry models, while the top-tier 285H setup lands around $300, which beats traditional desktop chip and board combos by a solid margin. The Arc 140T integrated graphics got a massive boost over last gen, and Erying even showed the system paired with an RTX 4070 running Cyberpunk without breaking a sweat. Mobile on desktop boards appeal mostly to internet cafe setups and first-time PC builders chasing value over upgrade paths, since the BGA-mounted chips stay soldered permanently.