We love our SBCs here at XDA, but unfortunately, due to rising hardware prices, the Raspberry Pi is a bit more expensive than it used to be. The price increases across all of the Pis weren’t the same, but in general, the more RAM a Pi had, the pricier it got. These increases meant the Raspberry Pi 5 8GB’s price was pushed up to $125, but if you’re looking to buy a board for yourself, I have some good news. Micro Center is currently knocking $35 off the asking price, meaning you can grab a board for a cool $89.99 if you’re quick.

The Raspberry Pi 5 is a solid pick, even with the price hike

A person holding a Raspberry Pi 5

If you’ve been around XDA for any amount of time, you’ll know that we love our Raspberry Pis. The cool thing about them is that you have a wide range of Pis to choose from, with the older models still being produced. The idea is that you won’t need a super-powerful board for absolutely every project you make; sometimes, you can grab a smaller, cheaper board that can get the job done just as well.

The Raspberry Pi 5 sits at the far end of the power spectrum, boasting the mightiest specs we’ve seen on a Pi to date. We’ve put Twister OS on it and saw how close it was to becoming a daily driver, and while this SBC is fantastic at emulating games, we’ve also explored some better ways to use a Raspberry Pi 5 at home than as a retro console.

If you fancy giving one a try, or you’ve always been on the fence about them, Micro Center in the US is currently selling them for $35 less at a far more digestible $89.99 price point. So, be sure to grab one before they all go out of stock.

A render of the Raspberry Pi 5

CPU

Arm Cortex-A76 (quad-core, 2.4GHz)

Memory

Up to 8GB LPDDR4X SDRAM

Operating System

Raspberry Pi OS (official)

Ports

2× USB 3.0, 2× USB 2.0, Ethernet, 2x micro HDMI, 2× 4-lane MIPI transceivers, PCIe Gen 2.0 interface, USB-C, 40-pin GPIO header

GPU

VideoCore VII

The Raspberry Pi is back, and the fifth iteration of the SBC is a lot more capable than the older models. From a new quad-core Arm Cortex-A76 CPU, support for dual monitor setups at 4K 60Hz, and a dedicated power button, there’s a lot to love about this palm-sized computer.