The Acemagic W1 follows a Micro-ATX form factor with dimensions of 169 mm wide, 98 mm tall, and 184 mm thick, resulting in a total volume of approximately 3,047 cm³. Storage is handled by a 1TB NVMe SSD, offering fast read and write access through the NVMe interface rather than a conventional SATA drive.
The processor runs at 8 × 3.8 GHz with a 15W TDP, capable of boosting up to 4.9 GHz in turbo mode, and supports 16 threads through multithreading. Cache is distributed as 1 MB of L2 per core totaling 8 MB, and 2 MB of L3 per core totaling 16 MB, helping maintain smooth data throughput under load. The CPU supports 64-bit processing and includes integrated graphics, while the clock multiplier is fixed at 38 with no unlocked multiplier available. Maximum rated CPU temperature is 100 °C.
The integrated GPU operates at a base clock of 800 MHz, boosting up to 2700 MHz in turbo mode, and delivers 8.294 TFLOPS of floating-point performance from its 768 shading units, 48 texture mapping units, and 32 render output units, resulting in a texture rate of 129.6 GTexels/s and a pixel rate of 86.4 GPixel/s. Built on a 4 nm process with approximately 25,390 million transistors, it connects via PCIe 4 and supports DirectX 12 Ultimate, OpenGL 4.6, and OpenCL 2.1, along with ray tracing and Double Precision Floating Point. Multi-display output across up to four screens is supported, while DLSS is not available on this GPU.
The Acemagic W1 is equipped with 32GB of DDR5 RAM running at 5600 MHz, providing a solid combination of capacity and memory bandwidth for everyday and multitasking workloads.
Wireless connectivity covers Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) along with backwards-compatible Wi-Fi 5 and Wi-Fi 4, paired with Bluetooth 5.2 for peripheral connections. On the wired side, the W1 provides six USB-A ports — two USB 3.2 Gen 2 and four USB 3.2 Gen 1 — plus one USB 4 40Gbps port that doubles as a Thunderbolt 4 connection, while there are no USB-C ports in any other configuration. Display output is handled by one HDMI 2.0 port and one DisplayPort output, and a single RJ45 port covers wired networking. There is no 3.5 mm headset jack, no VGA connector, and no S/PDIF output.
In PassMark testing, the Acemagic W1 achieves a multi-threaded score of 29,179, reflecting the combined processing capacity across all cores, while the single-threaded result stands at 3,768, indicating per-core execution speed.
The Acemagic W1 uses a Radeon 780M GPU based on the RDNA 3.0 architecture, and the CPU is suited for both laptop and desktop deployments without employing big.LITTLE technology. Memory can scale up to 256GB across two channels, with a maximum supported RAM speed of 7500 MHz, and the system supports ECC memory for added data reliability, though there is no external memory slot. The processor supports a broad range of instruction sets including MMX, AES, AVX, AVX2, FMA3, F16C, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2, and includes an NX bit for hardware-level security. Stereoscopic 3D is supported, storage does not use flash memory, air-water cooling is not present, and the unit comes with a one-year warranty.