June 2, 2026

Fast board, furious comments

First benchmark results from the Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3-powered Radxa Dragon Q8B

It crushes the Pi 5, but commenters are already yelling that the chip is ancient

TLDR: Radxa’s new Dragon Q8B is an unusually powerful mini computer board that beats the Raspberry Pi 5 in early testing. The comment drama is all about whether that matters when the chip inside is seen by some as old news, turning a launch into a speed-versus-age fight.

Radxa just rolled out the Dragon Q8B, a tiny computer board with the kind of brain usually found in older Arm laptops, and the early numbers are wild. In first tests, it reportedly blasts past the Raspberry Pi 5 and jumps to the top of several comparison charts. Translation for normal humans: this little board looks ridiculously fast for its size, with lots of memory, fast ports, and room for extra storage packed into a palm-sized slab.

But of course, the real show starts in the comments, where the community instantly split into two camps: "monster performance!" versus "cool, but why is Qualcomm still selling us 2020 leftovers?" The spiciest reaction came from one unimpressed commenter who basically looked at the impressive benchmark scores and said, nice try, still old cores. That’s the drama in a nutshell: people are excited that Radxa may finally have built a no-compromise speed demon, yet suspicious that the secret sauce is just a recycled laptop chip in a new costume.

There’s also a side plot worthy of its own meme thread: software support. Fans are cheering the raw power, then immediately side-eyeing the still-in-progress operating system situation like, "great, but does it actually behave?" So yes, the benchmarks are serving main-character energy, but the comments are serving trust issues, nostalgia, and a little bit of roast comedy.

Key Points

  • Radxa announced the Dragon Q8B, a new single-board computer based on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3.
  • The article presents early benchmark results showing the Dragon Q8B ahead of the Raspberry Pi 5 and leading many tests on sbc.compare.
  • The tested unit was a pre-release 32GB sample with software still under development, so the results are described as preliminary.
  • The board is available in 8GB, 16GB, and 32GB RAM variants and includes dual USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C, dual USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A, dual 2.5GbE, dual M.2 M-Key, and UFS support.
  • Linux support is identified as a challenge for the Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 platform, though the article reports progress using Armbian and mentions an Ubuntu 26 build from Radxa.

Hottest takes

"outdated CPUs" — throwa356262
"from 2020" — throwa356262
"What is with qualcomm" — throwa356262
Made with <3 by @siedrix and @shesho from CDMX. Powered by Forge&Hive.