Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

New HP Omen gaming desktop is a radical departure

Add as a preferred source on Google
Cooler of the HP Omen 35L.
HP

After a brief stint among the best gaming desktops, HP’s Omen brand hasn’t stepped up to the plate on the desktop front. The recent Omen 40L was a lukewarm PC, and the company has settled into the same design in slightly different sizes over the past few years. That’s changing with the new HP Omen 35L.

It’s what the company calls its first customizable desktop ever. Omen desktops have offered upgrade paths for years now, unlike something like the Alienware Aurora R16, but the Omen 35L pushes that idea further. The ground-up design now supports up to four sticks of memory, two M.2 NVMe SSD slots, and a 3.5mm storage bay. It also comes with a standard micro ATX motherboard and ATX power supply, as well as three slots for a GPU, allowing you to completely gut and replace the internals down the line.

Internals of the HP Omen 35L.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

The desktop is less interesting than what’s inside, however. HP is introducing its first Omen components inside the Omen 35L. It created a set of fans, two different power supplies, and two liquid coolers that will be available on their own. The Omen fans only come in a 120mm size, but HP is offering them either in a single pack with a traditional 4-pin connector, or in a three-pack with daisy chain connections and support for up to 14 fans through a hub.

Recommended Videos

For the power supplies, HP is offering 850-watt or 1000W, both of which are fully modular and come with an 80 Plus Gold certification — despite the fact that 80 Plus is slowly aging out of relevance. HP also says these power supplies support ATX 3.1, meaning you’ll get a 16-pin connector for RTX 40-series GPUs, as well as a zero RPM fan mode.

HP's 360mm Omen liquid cooler.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Out of all of the components, the all-in-one (AIO) liquid cooler is the most interesting. HP is offering it in a 240mm or 360mm size, and both come with an Asetek 7th-gen pump and support for both Intel and AMD — HP hasn’t specified which sockets specifically, however. The more interesting note is the cap. By default, these coolers come with an ARGB cap adorning the Omen logo, but you can upgrade it to an LCD screen.

It’s not a massive IPS display like we saw on the Hyte Thicc Q60, but the LCD cap allows you to show a video, GIF, system information, clock, or audio visualization on top of your cooler. The screen itself has a resolution of 480 x 480 and is capable of 250 nits of brightness.

These components will be available separately or as part of the Omen 35L. Outside of HP’s offerings, you can pack up to a Ryzen 7 8700G or Core i7-14700F into the machine, along with up to an RTX 4090 and 64GB of memory. HP hasn’t shared pricing details on the Omen 35L or its Omen components yet, nor when they’ll be available.

Jacob Roach
Former Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
This new Mac malware won’t let you use your computer until you surrender your password
This Mac malware turns your own computer against you
AI Generated Image

A newly discovered strain of macOS malware is taking social engineering to an unsettling new level. Instead of exploiting a software vulnerability or silently stealing information in the background, it simply refuses to let you use your Mac until you type in your login password.

Dubbed ClickLock, the malware repeatedly shuts down key macOS processes, disables notifications, displays convincing Apple password prompts, and effectively traps users in a loop that only ends when the correct password is entered. Once that happens, it doesn't just steal the password. It goes after browser data, cryptocurrency wallets, saved credentials, password managers, and much more.

Read more
1Password lets Claude inside your accounts without handing over the keys
Claude can now sign in on your behalf while your password stays hidden, though trusting it after login is a separate decision
1Password official

1Password is giving Claude a way into your online accounts without making your passwords part of the bargain. The new 1Password for Claude integration can fill login details while keeping the credentials hidden from Anthropic’s AI agent.

Available now on Mac, the feature kicks in when Claude reaches a sign-in page during a task. Claude requests a saved login, then you approve or deny it. If approved, 1Password submits the credentials through a separate encrypted channel. Passwords and one-time codes never enter Claude’s context or Anthropic’s systems.

Read more
New open-weight AI from China is toppling the best of OpenAI and Claude Fable
Moonshot’s 2.8-trillion-parameter Kimi K3 beats Fable 5 and GPT 5.6 Sol in select benchmarks
Art, Drawing, Plant

China's Moonshot AI has launched Kimi K3, a massive 2.8-trillion-parameter model built for coding, research, reasoning, and visual tasks. Moonshot admits K3 still trails Claude Fable 5 and GPT 5.6 Sol overall. Even so, its benchmark results put it surprisingly close to both, and it finishes ahead in several tests.

How close is Kimi K3 to the best closed models?

Read more