Lenovo ThinkCentre M90q Gen 6 Black 2025

★★★★☆ 4.4 (33)

Intel vPro® Enterprise manageability and a 14-core Core Ultra 5 processor deliver strong business compute in a 1.34kg chassis. The 0.9-liter design crams in Thunderbolt, HDMI 2.1, and six USB-A ports for broad peripheral connectivity without desk clutter. This PC is best for IT-managed enterprise environments needing secure, remotely deployable workstations for office productivity and data tasks.

CPU Intel Core Ultra 5 235T
RAM 16 GB
Storage 256 GB
GPU Integrated Intel Graphics
form factor mini
psu w 230
OS Windows 11 Pro
Lenovo ThinkCentre M90q Gen 6 Black 2025 desktop
73 Overall Score
Price ¥0
No listings available

Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

A shockingly powerful and tiny business PC that's held back by a cheap, tiny SSD and a customer service team that seems to have vanished. Buy it cheap, upgrade the storage yourself, and it's a desk-space miracle.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Incredibly compact, disappears behind a monitor 87th
  • Powerful Core Ultra CPU chews through work tasks 86th
  • Port selection is best-in-class for its size 71th
  • Runs whisper-quiet even under load 70th

Cons

  • 256GB SSD is a joke at this price, way too small
  • Integrated graphics are useless for anything beyond basic displays
  • Customer service horror stories are a real red flag
  • Price can balloon to over $2300 depending on the vendor

What owners think

The Word on the Street

4.4/5 (33 reviews)
👍 Owners are genuinely delighted by how much power and connectivity is crammed into such a small, quiet box.
👍 The easy setup and ability to drive multiple monitors without a hiccup is a recurring win for productivity-focused buyers.
👎 A few unlucky souls report that getting help from Lenovo's support team is a nightmare, with billing issues and unhelpful agents.

How owner sentiment changed over time

Exclusive

Based on when customers actually wrote their reviews - so you can see whether early praise held up.

Owner sentiment has held steady over time
1★2★3★4★5★Q1 '26: 4.8★ · 15 reviewsQ2 '26: 4.6★ · 18 reviews1518Q1 '26Q2 '26
Avg ratingHappy (4-5★)Unhappy (1-2★)Bar height = number of reviews

Based on 33 dated customer reviews, grouped by calendar quarter. Period analysis is in English.

The proof

Performance

What surprised us most is how this pint-sized PC handles the daily grind. The Intel Core Ultra 5 235T is a strong performer, landing in the 71st percentile for CPUs, which means it chews through spreadsheets, browser tabs, and office apps faster than most full-sized desktops we've tested. It's also dead silent and runs cool, even when you're pushing it. The real bottleneck is the storage. That 256GB SSD is a weak spot, sitting in the 19th percentile. It's small and, frankly, a bit slow compared to what you'd get in a machine at this price point. You'll want to swap it out or add an external drive almost immediately.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 70.7
GPU 51.8
RAM 54
Ports 86.4
Storage 19
Reliability 70
Social Proof 87.4

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core Ultra 5 235T
Cores 14
Frequency 4.4 GHz
L3 Cache 24 MB

Graphics

GPU Integrated Intel Graphics
Type integrated
VRAM 16 GB
VRAM Type Shared

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 256 GB
Storage Type NVMe SSD

Build

Form Factor mini
PSU 230
Weight 1.3 kg / 3.0 lbs

Connectivity

USB-C Ports 1
USB Ports 6
Thunderbolt Thunderbolt™ 4
HDMI 1x HDMI 2.1
DisplayPort DisplayPort 1.4
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 6E
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.3
Ethernet Integrated Ethernet

System

OS Windows 11 Pro

vs Competition

The M90q's real competition isn't a giant gaming rig like the HP Omen 45L or the ASUS ROG GM700TZ. Those are in a different universe for gaming, where the Lenovo's integrated graphics score a pathetic 14.5 out of 100. The more interesting fight is with the Apple Mac Studio M4 Max. The Mac Studio will obliterate the Lenovo in any creative or graphics-heavy task, but it also starts at a much higher price and locks you into macOS. For a pure Windows business machine in the smallest possible footprint, the M90q is a standout, but the Dell Tower Plus is worth a look if you can spare a bit more desk space for a more traditional, and likely cheaper, upgrade path.

Spec Lenovo ThinkCentre M90q Gen 6 HP Omen 45L ASUS Republic of Gamers GM700TZ-BS978 Apple Mac Studio M4 Max MSI EdgeXpert EdgeXpert-11SUS Dell Tower Plus EBT2250
CPU Intel Core Ultra 5 235T Intel Core Ultra 9 285K AMD Ryzen 9 9950X Apple M4 Max NVIDIA GB Intel Core Ultra 9 285K
RAM (GB) 16 64 64 36 128 64
Storage (GB) 256 8096 2048 512 4000 12096
GPU Integrated Intel Graphics NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT Apple M4 Max 32-core NVIDIA Blackwell Architecture NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070
Form Factor mini mid-tower desktop sff mini mid-tower
Psu W 230 - 850 - 240 -
OS Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home macOS NVIDIA DGX OS Windows 11 Pro
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortStorageReliabilitySocial Proof
Lenovo ThinkCentre M90q Gen 6 70.751.85486.4197087.4
HP Omen 45L Compare 97.687.595.698.199.57086.9
ASUS Republic of Gamers GM700TZ-BS978 Compare 98.977.994.397.491.43774.8
Apple Mac Studio M4 Max Compare 85.564.769.494.630.299.499.9
MSI EdgeXpert EdgeXpert-11SUS Compare 99.79598.787.297.93784.1
Dell Tower Plus EBT2250 Compare 97.680.994.384.499.97054.5

Price

Value & Pricing

Value here is a moving target. We're seeing a wild $1018 price spread across vendors, from $1299 all the way up to $2317. At the low end, it's a compelling, if storage-starved, workhorse. At the high end, it's a complete rip-off. Your best bet is to hunt for the deal at the lower end of that range and immediately budget for a 1TB NVMe drive. Don't pay a premium for this thing.

Read more

Overview

The Lenovo ThinkCentre M90q Gen 6 is the tiny desktop that makes you question why you ever put up with a giant tower. It's a shockingly capable little box that handles serious business workloads without breaking a sweat or taking up any real space on your desk. The one thing to know is this: you're getting a powerhouse CPU and a ton of ports in a package smaller than a hardcover book, but you absolutely need to factor in the cost of a storage upgrade from day one.

Common Questions

Q: Can I upgrade the RAM and storage myself?

Yes, and you absolutely should. The RAM and SSD are user-accessible. Swapping in a faster 1TB or 2TB NVMe drive is a day-one project that transforms this machine.

Q: Can this tiny PC handle gaming?

Not a chance. The integrated Intel graphics are fine for spreadsheets and 4K video playback, but they score a miserable 14.5 out of 100 for gaming. Stick to Solitaire.

Q: Does it come with a VESA mount to attach to a monitor?

Frustratingly, no. Despite being designed for it, a proper VESA mount is often an extra purchase, and some owners complain the options aren't great. Check what's in the box before you buy.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a machine that can do even light gaming or creative work like video editing, this isn't it. Go get a Mac Studio if you need compact creative power, or a small form factor gaming PC if you want to play anything more demanding than Minesweeper. This is a business machine, period.

Verdict

The Lenovo ThinkCentre M90q Gen 6 is a fantastic tiny PC for a very specific person: a business user who needs a powerful, reliable, and invisible Windows machine with a ton of ports. It nails that brief. Just be smart about it. Buy it from the vendor with the best price, immediately replace the laughably small SSD, and maybe say a little prayer you never have to deal with Lenovo's customer support. If you do that, you'll have a desktop you can genuinely forget is even there.

Usage Scores

Overall (72.7)Ai Llm (27)Gaming (14.5)Compact (87.3)Creator (26.5)Business (80.5)Developer (68)Home Office (71.5)Workstation (55.2)

Other Configurations21

Show all 21 configurations

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