ASUS ExpertCenter P200 AiO: A no-fuss office desktop that passed military durability tests

By: Anton Kratiuk | today, 10:46

If your office PC's main job is running spreadsheets and video calls without drama, ASUS has a new contender. The ExpertCenter P200 AiO was announced on June 2, 2026, as a compact business all-in-one built around AMD's 15W processor lineup. It's aimed squarely at reception desks, co-working spaces, and standard office workstations where a slim footprint matters more than raw performance.

The specs

ASUS offers three processor tiers: an Athlon Silver 10 at the entry level, a Ryzen 3 30 in the middle, and a Ryzen 5 40 at the top. All three run at a 15W TDP, which keeps fan noise low and the chassis thin. The machine supports up to 16GB of LPDDR5X RAM — enough for a browser with dozens of tabs and typical business software — and up to a 512GB PCIe 4.0 SSD. Connectivity includes Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.4, plus a wired Ethernet port, USB-C, USB-A, and HDMI 2.1.


ASUS ExpertCenter P200 AiO on a desk stand. Illustration: ASUS

The display is a 23.8-inch Full HD IPS panel at 300 nits — fine for indoor office lighting, not suited for working near bright windows. ASUS has earned a TÜV Rheinland low-blue-light certification for the screen, which is worth noting for anyone staring at it for eight hours a day. The built-in 1080p webcam includes a mechanical privacy shutter, so there's no need for sticky tape over the lens between Zoom calls.

Security and durability

ASUS put this office machine through MIL-STD-810H lab testing — the same standard used to assess military equipment. That means it held up under controlled conditions simulating knocks during transit or an accidental desk slide. It's worth noting that ASUS's own documentation clarifies the testing is lab-based and does not cover damage from replicating those conditions in the real world. Still, for an SMB or government procurement buyer, the certification adds a credible line to the spec sheet.

ExpertCenter P200 AiO in a working environment. Illustration: ASUS

On the security side, the P200 checks the boxes that IT managers actually care about: a dTPM module for encryption, a NIST SP 800-155 compliant BIOS, and a Kensington lock slot for physical security. The mechanical webcam shutter rounds out a surprisingly thorough enterprise security checklist for a machine in this class.

The catch

AMD Ryzen 30/40-series chips are rare in business all-in-ones — Intel's i3 and i5 dominate rivals like the Lenovo ThinkCentre M90a and Dell OptiPlex 3000. That lower-power AMD approach could make the P200 a cost-effective alternative, but only if pricing lands in a competitive range. ASUS has not confirmed retail pricing or an exact launch date for the US or UK. Until those numbers appear, it's a promising spec sheet without a price tag to test it against.