I'll put this here, up front. I love SBCs, and I love the Raspberry Pi. I love reading about projects that people do with them, I love tinkering with them, and I love seeing all the new hardware that's coming on the horizon. So, I hope you don't chase me with pitchforks when I say that sometimes—sometimes!—a mini PC does the job better than a Raspberry Pi. I know, I know, but it's the truth. So, here are some of the Raspberry Pi projects I've done in the past that I kind of wish I just used a mini PC for.

3 Using it as a mini PC

Let's start this off with a "duh" moment

So when I first got into SBCs, I really wanted to see if it could out-mini PC a mini PC. I was kind of naive; I didn't really know what I was getting into, and I essentially saw the Raspberry Pi as a computer you can stuff in your pocket. I can bring a little work station wherever I go on a board the size of a credit card! What's not to love?

Well, I tried using it as a mini PC, hoping that having a pocket-sized computer would compensate for the reduced hardware specifications. It turns out that trying to make a Raspberry Pi 3 your daily driver, multitasking with work and a video on the side, was pretty miserable. The lack of ports made it really hard to attach all the hardware I needed to get the job done.

Plus, what was the point of bringing the Pi around with me, anyway? I'd need a screen to even get it working. It was an optimistic project, but no, I couldn't make a Pi outdo a mini PC at its own game. Maybe a Pi 5 would be better?

2 Using it for gaming

A mini PC just did the job better

I also had a stint where I tried using a Raspberry Pi for playing both emulated and simple games. The idea was that it'd be like a miniature console that I could bring out whenever I wanted to play something. Sure, it wouldn't be running Cyberpunk 2077 any time soon, but I wanted to, say, emulate something or play a less intense game, it should be good.

It's entirely possible to make a gaming console out of a Pi (and several XDA writers have done just that), but when compared to a mini PC with a dedicated GPU, the latter just has it beat. I could play more games, run them better, and install Windows on the PC for maximum compatibility.

👁 raspberry-pi-laptop-15
5 Raspberry Pi projects for gamers

Put your gaming and tinkering skills to the test with these fun Raspberry Pi projects

1 Using it as a media center

There wasn't much need for the Pi

Finally, there's the time I had the grand idea of using a Raspberry Pi as a media center. The idea was that I could set up a media center operating system on the Pi and have it as an on-demand service that I could access whenever I liked. Given its small size, the Raspberry Pi makes for an elegant and discreet way to display movies or music on a larger screen.

However, I found myself not falling in love with the idea of using a separate media center with a Raspberry Pi. If I wanted to display media on a larger screen, I found it more convenient to beam it over using a mini PC instead of setting up the Pi. And I'm sure, for some use cases, the Raspberry Pi is ideal. However, if I'm already at my PC, it makes a lot more sense for me to just use that to cast media instead of setting up a Pi to do the same job.

👁 zimablade-connected
How I built a powerful media center with my SBC

Even a compact PC can be a mighty server for streaming media.

Despite it all, I still love the Pi

That's not to say that a mini PC will always be the better choice over a Raspberry Pi. I'd like to see someone squeeze a mini-ITX motherboard into a sensor-based system, for example. However, to the surprise of absolutely no one, the SBC doesn't hold a candle to mini PCs for more demanding tasks.