That sounds like a beast, especially for photo and video editing, not to mention gaming. Plus, the GPU could get upgraded from 8 to 16 cores. Leaks point to the possibility of 12 cores, which is four more cores than the current M1 chip. There could be a more powerful 27-inch iMac on the way with a powerful M2 chip. Plus, my colleague Heny Casey’s MacBook Air M1 review piqued my interest in Apple’s new silicon. However, since the start of the pandemic, I’ve been exclusively working from home, so I wouldn’t mind a faster iMac. In the past six years, I’ve upgraded its RAM from 8GB to 16GB and so far it handles macOS 11.3 Big Sur with aplomb. In 2015 (after nine years with my iMac), I pulled the trigger and purchased the 27-inch iMac 5K. (For what it’s worth, the machine is still operational, albeit on an outdated version of Mac OS X Snow Leopard). It was an epic machine that in my opinion blew all Windows desktops out of the water.
My first iMac purchase was back in 2006 when Apple announced the first Intel-based Mac.