HP OmniDesk BL6L4AV-Upgraded Dark Wood 2025

★★★★★ 5.0 (1)

Equipped with a 10-core Intel Core Ultra 5 Series 2 chip and 16GB of DDR5 RAM, this mini-tower handles multitasking and office workflows with ease. The professionally upgraded system offers enormous 1TB NVMe storage and extensive connectivity with 12 total USB ports, all housed in a dark wood finish that suits professional environments. It’s best for office workers and business users needing a reliable, wired-ready desktop for data-heavy tasks, not gaming.

CPU Intel Core Ultra 5 225
RAM 16 GB
Storage 1 TB
GPU Intel Graphics
form factor mid-tower
psu w 280
OS Windows 11 Pro
HP OmniDesk BL6L4AV-Upgraded Dark Wood 2025 desktop
76 Puntuación global
También disponible en:

Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

A port-packed office PC that's refreshingly honest about its limits. Buy it for the connectivity, not the graphics.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Absolutely loaded with ports, including dual USB-C and eight USB-A connections 95th
  • Speedy 1TB NVMe SSD gives you plenty of fast storage out of the box 75th
  • Comes with Windows 11 Pro, not the hobbled Home edition 70th
  • Includes a wireless keyboard and mouse so you're ready to go immediately 69th

Cons

  • Integrated graphics are a dead end for gaming or any GPU-accelerated work
  • The 280W power supply leaves almost no room for adding a dedicated graphics card later
  • 16GB of RAM is just okay, and the 44th percentile ranking shows it
  • Zero customer reviews on Best Buy means you're buying blind on social proof

What owners think

The Word on the Street

5.0/5 (1 reviews)
👍 Early buyers are genuinely delighted, calling it a charm to set up and exactly what they needed for daily work.
🤔 The complete lack of reviews on Best Buy's site makes it hard to gauge long-term reliability, which is a bit of a leap of faith.

Cómo cambió la opinión de los propietarios con el tiempo

Exclusiva

Según cuándo escribieron realmente sus opiniones los clientes, para ver si los elogios iniciales se mantuvieron.

1Q2 '26
Satisfechos (4-5★)Insatisfechos (1-2★)Altura de la barra = número de opinionesFecha estimada

Basado en 1 opiniones de clientes con fecha, agrupadas por trimestre natural. El análisis por periodo está en inglés.

The proof

Performance

The Intel Core Ultra 5 Series 2 chip is a solid performer for everyday tasks, landing in the 68th percentile for CPU grunt. It chews through Office apps, video calls, and dozens of Chrome tabs without breaking a sweat. What surprised us, though, is how HP paired this capable processor with integrated Intel Graphics that are just average for the category. The 16GB of DDR5 RAM is about middle-of-the-pack, which is fine for now but might feel tight in a few years. The real star here is the 1TB NVMe SSD, which is snappy and spacious enough that you won't be playing storage Tetris anytime soon.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 69.2
GPU 45
RAM 45.8
Ports 95.4
Storage 56.9
Reliability 69.9
Social Proof 74.9

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core Ultra 5 225
Cores 10
Frequency 3.3 GHz
L3 Cache 20 MB

Graphics

GPU Intel Graphics
Type integrated

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 1 TB
Storage Type SSD

Build

Form Factor mid-tower
PSU 280
Weight 4.4 kg / 9.6 lbs

Connectivity

USB-C Ports 2
USB Ports 8
HDMI 1x HDMI
DisplayPort 1x DisplayPort
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 6
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.4
Ethernet Gigabit Ethernet

System

OS Windows 11 Pro

vs Competition

Stack this OmniDesk against the Dell Tower Plus EBT2250 and you'll find a very similar vibe, but the Dell often comes with a dedicated GPU option that makes it more flexible. The Lenovo Legion Tower 5i is in a completely different league for gaming, though you'll pay more and lose some of that business-focused simplicity. And then there's the Apple Mac mini M4, which absolutely demolishes this HP in performance per dollar and energy efficiency, but locks you into macOS. If you need Windows and a ton of ports without breaking the bank, the OmniDesk carves out a niche. For anyone else, the Mac mini is the smarter buy.

Spec HP OmniDesk BL6L4AV-Upgraded Lenovo Legion 34IAS10 ASUS Republic of Gamers GM700TZ-BS978 MSI EdgeXpert EdgeXpert-11SUS Dell Tower Plus EBT2250 CLX SET TGMSETRTU5204BM
CPU Intel Core Ultra 5 225 Intel Core Ultra 9 AMD Ryzen 9 9950X NVIDIA GB Intel Core Ultra 9 285 Intel Core i9 14900KF
RAM (GB) 16 64 64 128 64 64
Storage (GB) 1024 3072 2048 4000 12096 8000
GPU Intel Graphics NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT NVIDIA Blackwell Architecture NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070
Form Factor mid-tower mid-tower desktop mini mid-tower mid-tower
Psu W 280 1200 850 240 - 850
OS Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home NVIDIA DGX OS Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortStorageReliabilitySocial Proof
HP OmniDesk BL6L4AV-Upgraded 69.24545.895.456.969.974.9
Lenovo Legion 34IAS10 Compare 97.887.396.691.896.569.984.5
ASUS Republic of Gamers GM700TZ-BS978 Compare 98.877.294.397.491.536.974.9
MSI EdgeXpert EdgeXpert-11SUS Compare 99.794.898.787.297.936.983.1
Dell Tower Plus EBT2250 Compare 97.880.994.384.499.969.954.7
CLX SET TGMSETRTU5204BM Compare 94.380.996.686.499.211.395.5

Price

Value & Pricing

Pricing on this model is all over the map, with a spread from $770 to an absurd $274,742 across vendors. At the low end, you're getting a fair deal for a business desktop with Windows 11 Pro and a solid port selection. At anything above $800, you're overpaying. The sweet spot is clearly Best Buy's listed price, and you should run from any seller trying to charge a premium for what is essentially a competent but unremarkable office PC.

Read more

Overview

The HP OmniDesk BL6L4AV-Upgraded is a straightforward office PC that knows exactly what it is, and doesn't try to be anything else. The one thing to know is that this is a connectivity monster with a port selection that puts most gaming rigs to shame, but it's powered by integrated graphics that'll choke on anything more demanding than a spreadsheet. It's a machine built for multitasking with documents and browser tabs, not for gaming or creative work. If you need a reliable, quiet desktop for a home office or business front desk, this thing is refreshingly honest about its mission.

Common Questions

Q: Can I add a graphics card to this for gaming?

Technically yes, but realistically no. The 280W power supply is the bottleneck here. Even a low-power card like an RTX 3050 would be cutting it dangerously close, and you'd likely need a PSU upgrade first. This machine was never designed to be a gaming rig.

Q: Is 16GB of RAM enough for this PC?

For office work and general multitasking right now, absolutely. But with DDR5 prices dropping, 16GB is starting to feel like the new 8GB. You'll be fine for a few years, but power users with dozens of tabs and large Excel files might wish they had 32GB sooner rather than later.

Q: Does this come with Wi-Fi and Bluetooth?

Yes, it's got Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.4 built in. No need for dongles or Ethernet cables unless you want the absolute fastest connection. The wireless keyboard and mouse in the box connect right up.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a machine that can handle gaming, video editing, or 3D modeling, this isn't it. Go get a Lenovo Legion Tower 5i or even an Apple Mac mini M4 instead. This OmniDesk is strictly for spreadsheets, email, and web browsing, and it makes no apologies for that.

Verdict

Buy the HP OmniDesk if you need a no-nonsense Windows machine with more USB ports than you can count and zero gaming ambitions. It's a purpose-built office worker that'll handle spreadsheets, email, and video calls for years without complaint. Just make sure you're paying the $770 street price and not a penny more. If you have even a passing interest in gaming or video editing, close this tab and go look at something with a real GPU.

Usage Scores

Overall (75.8)Ai Llm (25.7)Gaming (13.8)Compact (43.2)Creator (25.7)Business (75.9)Developer (66.8)Home Office (75.4)Workstation (56.3)

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