This Ryzen 7 9700X, GeForce RTX 5070 gaming PC is the cheapest I've seen this week, which might not
Published: January 01, 0001
If you're in the market for a new gaming PC before all the prices go really haywire and you want one that will last you for many years, then you'll want one that sports one of AMD or Nvidia's latest [[link]] graphics cards—a -series or GeForce RTX 50-series. Unfortunately, even the prices for system builders are somewhat variable, so finding a new desktop PC with a or RNDA 4 GPU can be tricky.
But let's go through just what you are getting for your money. First of all, that processor. It's one of AMD's latest generation of chips (technically, chiplets) underneath the cooler, and as with all Ryzen 7 models, it has eight cores, supporting up to 16 threads, with a boost clock of 5.5 GHz. It's a very capable processor and we rate it as the you can buy right now.
All Ryzen processors love fast RAM and here you're getting 32 GB worth of DDR5-6000, the sweet spot for AMD chips. There's no indication of what timings the RAM kit uses, so it might not be the snappiest memory around, but you're getting plenty of it at least.
Handling all of the rendering duties is a . It's arguably not the best model in Nvidia's RTX [[link]] 50-series but that's mostly because it's not hugely faster than the , but in its favour, you're getting the full suite of DLSS 4 upscaling and frame generation technologies. The latter, in games that support MFG (Multi Frame Generation), is a remarkable thing in action, greatly boosting frame rates for barely any noticeable increase in input lag.
Naturally, for this price sector, you're only getting 1 TB of storage, in the form of a PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD. Fortunately, the motherboard will support one or two further SSDs (it's hard to tell exactly how many) and I'd be tempted to drop a in [[link]] there for my Steam library.
Heat is handled by a large 360 mm AIO liquid and three RGB 120 mm fans, though the big CPU cooler is a tad over-the-top for the Ryzen 7 9700X as it sips power thanks to its 65 W TDP. The case looks a little cheap in places but I like the fact that there is plenty of ventilation at the bottom and the LCD panel is a nice touch.
At a dollar shy of $1,700 this AVGPC desktop gaming PC certainly isn't a budget offering but you're getting lots of capable hardware, and taking everything into account (especially just how volatile PC hardware prices are at the moment with tariffs causing such uncertainties), you could do a lot worse than this.
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Comments (3)
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