Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple’s next-gen M4 Macs look set to embrace serious gaming

The Mac mini on a wooden table.
Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

Apple’s Mac machines and gaming don’t quite fit in the same equation, even though the recent trajectory of its Metal architecture has pulled off a few surprises. But it looks like the upcoming M4-tier machines won’t pull any punches, including the Mac mini.

In the latest edition of his Power On newsletter, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman writes that for the first time, Apple’s entry-level desktop computer will offer ray tracing support. For the unaware, it’s a lighting system that adds a whole new level of visual realism to games.

Recommended Videos

On the flip side, ray tracing is also quite taxing on the local hardware and needs a capable CPU as well as GPU to deliver the desired results in AAA games. Or, to put it in simpler terms, you need a discrete GPU on a computing platform to achieve a meaningful ray tracing output for shadows and reflections.

Ever since Apple shifted to the M-series silicon, the doors for a discrete GPU have been closed to the Mac lineup. Apple looks set to make a shift, and it could happen starting next week as the new slate of M4-powered Macs is announced.

The ports on the back of the Mac mini.
The M4 Mac mini will be more compact and could get more ports. Digital Trends

Now, adding support for ray tracing would automatically get any gaming enthusiast excited. But the challenge ahead would still be monumental because all that firepower would be wasted if there simply weren’t enough games to play.

“That should be a boon for gamers, especially if Apple ever gets the Mac’s gaming library into better shape,” notes Bloomberg. Over the past couple of years, Apple has convinced a few heavy hitters to bring titles such as Assassin’s Creed Shadows, Death Stranding Director’s Cut, and Resident Evil series games to the Mac.

While those attempts are commendable, they are nowhere near the diversity offered by the likes of Steam for Windows. Plus, games ported for Metal architecture haven’t quite reached the same performance benchmarks as those built natively for the x86 platforms.

In addition to the Mac Mini, Apple is also expected to serve ray tracing on the M4-based versions of the Mac Studio and Mac Pro next year. However, the situation for the Mac mini is rather curious.

The MacBook Pro open on a table in front of a couch.
Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

Apple is expected to launch a redesigned Mac mini next week, one that will offer a smaller footprint and a revised port layout. How Apple juggles the thermal headroom inside a cramped chassis while also delivering the perks of ray tracing will be interesting to see.

The company is further expected to shed some of its stingy RAM approach this time. “For the first time, Apple is also likely to start shipping at least some low-end Macs with 16 gigabytes of memory at minimum,” says the Bloomberg report.

Apple is also rumored to fit only the higher-end configuration of the M4 silicon inside its upcoming Mac lineup, eschewing the version with nine CPU cores and using only the trim with 10 CPU cores.

As for the rest of the hardware, leaks suggest the upcoming 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro laptops will rock a familiar design. Moreover, we’re not expecting any aesthetic fireworks for the refreshed iMac, either.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is a tech journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started writing…
Apple faces challenges with bringing OLED to the MacBook Air
The MacBook Air on a white table.

A report from Korean outlet The Elec suggests the OLED MacBook Air that Apple was allegedly planning to release in 2027 could face significant delays. While progress for the OLED MacBook Pro seems to be going smoothly, the price increase caused by the new display technology is a much bigger problem for the budget MacBook Air models.

One of the biggest selling points of the MacBook Air is its lower price, making it great for first-time Mac buyers, students, and anyone else who doesn't expressly need the power of a Pro. While price increases are a natural part of the tech industry, the slightly disappointing sales of the 2024 OLED iPad Pro suggest that a new display simply isn't enough of an incentive for consumers to justify a higher price tag.

Read more
Is the M4 Mac mini Apple’s first true gaming PC?
Mac Mini with M4

The M4 Mac mini made its big splash last week. Among the normal Apple marketing content, however, I noticed something I'd never seen before. It's the image above that I'm talking about -- and by now, you've probably noticed the same thing that caught my eye. The PS5 controller.

Sure, you've always been able to connect up a game controller and use it for Mac gaming, but never have I seen it promoted by Apple itself. By putting this so forward in the marketing materials, Apple is not-so-subtly implying that these are PCs that are at least to some degree built for gaming. Is this Apple's first true attempt at taking a real step into the world of PC gaming? There's more evidence than you might think.
Building momentum

Read more
One more year of the iMac Pro being missing in action
Apple iMac Pro News

This week, Apple announced a new M4 iMac. It got some upgrades that help make it more appealing to creatives and pros, such as the more powerful M4 chip, Thunderbolt 4, upgraded camera, and nano-texture display.

But an iMac Pro, this is not.

Read more