Portable external GPU docks keep getting more capable, and Morefine is pushing the concept forward with the Morefine G2. The compact docking station squeezes an NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti with 16GB of GDDR7 memory into a chassis measuring just 14 x 10 x 5.4 cm (5.5 x 3.9 x 2.1 inches) and weighing roughly 700 g (1.5 lbs). It connects to laptops, mini PCs, or handhelds via either Thunderbolt 5 or OCuLink (PCIe 4.0 x4), making it one of the first eGPU docks to support the newer Thunderbolt standard.
Beyond raw GPU power, the G2 doubles as a full docking station. Its port selection includes HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort 2.0, three USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A ports at 10 Gbps, and dual Thunderbolt 5 connections, one for the host PC and one for daisy-chaining displays or peripherals. A 330W power adapter is included, though OCuLink users will need to supply their own cable.
Linux users will want to go in with eyes open. The RTX 5060 Ti's Blackwell architecture requires NVIDIA's open-source kernel modules (driver 570 and later), available via the open-gpu-kernel-modules repository. Neither of the G2's connection paths is trouble-free on Linux right now. Open issues in the NVIDIA repository and community threads on egpu.io document the GPU failing to initialize when connected as an eGPU over Thunderbolt, while separate reports on the NVIDIA Developer Forums describe GSP firmware crashes over OCuLink with kernel 6.8, leaving Linux eGPU support for this Blackwell generation still a work in progress.
The G2 is available for pre-order at $1,099 (€1,010). That positions it above the outgoing G1 model, which is still available with an RTX 4080 and 12GB of GDDR6 for $959 (€880). The RTX 4080 remains the faster GPU in raw gaming benchmarks despite being a generation older, so buyers will need to weigh newer memory and Thunderbolt 5 support against outright performance. Morefine may eventually offer higher-tier RTX 50-series options in the G2 chassis, but for now the lineup starts and ends with the 5060 Ti.



