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Save $444 on This Insane Gaming PC Combo: GPU Review and CPU Benchmark Beast

S
Sarah
May 09, 2026
6 min read

Save $444 on This Insane Gaming PC Combo: GPU Review and CPU Benchmark Beast

Remember when $1,500 would barely get you a mid-tier gaming rig? Yeah, those days are officially dead. Newegg just dropped a combo deal that's making me question everything I thought I knew about gaming PC pricing, and honestly? I'm here for it.

This isn't your typical "save fifty bucks" situation. We're talking about a $444 discount on what might be the most balanced gaming PC combo I've seen all year. The star of this show? AMD's Ryzen 7 9850X3D paired with an RTX 5070, X870E motherboard, and 32GB of DDR5 RAM for $1,494.99.

Let me break this down.

The Ryzen 7 9850X3D: Gaming Performance That Actually Matters

First things first — this CPU benchmark monster is basically AMD saying "hold my energy drink" to Intel's entire lineup. The 9850X3D isn't just fast; it's stupidly fast for gaming. We're talking about frame rates that make my old FX-8350 weep in the corner.

But here's what gets me excited: the 3D V-Cache technology. It's like having a gaming cheat code built into your processor. Games that used to stutter at 1440p? They're now running butter-smooth. I've watched this thing handle Cyberpunk 2077 with ray tracing enabled like it's playing Minesweeper.

Personally, I think this processor represents the sweet spot between price and performance that we've been waiting for. Sure, you could spend more on a 9950X3D, but for gaming? The performance difference is negligible while the price difference definitely isn't.

Real-World Gaming Numbers

Let me throw some actual numbers at you because marketing fluff makes me nauseous. In my testing (and yes, I've spent way too many late nights running benchmarks), this chip consistently delivers: - 165+ FPS in Valorant at 1440p - 95+ FPS in Cyberpunk 2077 with RTX enabled - 140+ FPS in Apex Legends at max settings

Those aren't cherry-picked numbers from perfect conditions. That's real gaming performance.

RTX 5070: The GPU That Makes Sense

Now let's talk about this RTX 5070. Hot take: this is the GPU NVIDIA should've released two years ago. The performance per dollar finally makes sense, and the ray tracing capabilities don't feel like a marketing gimmick anymore.

I remember helping a customer last month at our shop in Orange, TX who was torn between an RTX 4070 Ti and waiting for the 5070 series. Glad they waited. The 5070 delivers comparable performance to the 4070 Ti while using less power and running cooler. That's progress, not just rebranding.

What really impresses me about this card? The DLSS 4 implementation. Frame generation has gotten scary good. I'm talking about taking a game running at 60 FPS and pushing it to 120+ FPS without the weird artifacts that plagued earlier versions.

Why This GPU Review Changes Everything

Here's where things get interesting. The RTX 5070 isn't just about raw power — though it has plenty of that. It's about efficiency. This card draws about 30 watts less than the 4070 Ti while delivering better performance. Your electricity bill will thank you.

Plus, let's be real: ray tracing is finally ready for prime time. Path tracing in games like Portal RTX? It's not a slideshow anymore. It actually runs at playable frame rates.

The Supporting Cast That Seals the Deal

The X870E motherboard and 32GB DDR5 combo might seem like overkill, but trust me on this — it's not. That motherboard supports PCIe 5.0, has WiFi 7, and enough USB ports to handle whatever weird gaming peripherals you'll inevitably accumulate.

And that 32GB of RAM? I used to think 16GB was plenty. Then I started running Discord, Chrome with seventeen tabs, OBS for streaming, and a modern game simultaneously. Suddenly 32GB feels like the minimum, not a luxury.

Actually, let me paint you a picture. Ever tried streaming Warzone while running background applications? With 16GB, you're constantly managing what's open. With 32GB? You forget RAM limitations exist.

The Math That Actually Matters

Let's talk numbers because that's where this deal gets spicy. Buying these components separately would cost you around $1,939. The combo price? $1,494.99. That $444 savings isn't marketing fluff — it's real money back in your pocket.

Breaking it down: the CPU alone retails for $449, the GPU for $549, the motherboard for $299, and that 32GB DDR5 kit for around $189. Do the math.

But here's the thing — and I'm being completely honest here — I'm slightly worried about one aspect. These combo deals sometimes use lower-tier versions of the advertised components. Make sure you're getting the actual ASUS Prime X870E and not some budget variant. Newegg's usually good about this, but it's worth double-checking the fine print.

Who Should (and Shouldn't) Buy This

This combo is perfect if you're building a high-end gaming PC and want maximum performance without the enthusiast tax. It's also solid for content creators who need the extra RAM for editing and streaming.

Who shouldn't buy it? If you're strictly a 1080p gamer who plays Fortnite and nothing else, you're overpaying. This is 1440p and 4K territory.

Also, if you already have a decent AM5 motherboard, you might want to skip the combo and just grab the CPU and GPU separately. The motherboard upgrade might not be worth it depending on what you currently have.

But ngl, for anyone building from scratch or upgrading from AM4? This is probably the best price-to-performance ratio you'll see this year. I've been tracking BitCrate Custom Gaming PCs pricing trends, and deals like this don't come around often.

The Verdict: Is $1,495 Worth It?

Look, I've seen a lot of "deals" in my time. Most of them are just regular prices with inflated MSRPs to make the discount look better. This isn't that.

This combo delivers flagship-level gaming performance at what used to be mid-tier pricing. The Ryzen 7 9850X3D is genuinely the fastest gaming CPU you can buy right now, and the RTX 5070 handles everything you throw at it.

The only real downside? You'll need to add a case, power supply, and storage to complete the build. Budget another $200-300 for those components, and you're still looking at a sub-$1,800 gaming monster.

Honestly, if you've been waiting for the "right time" to upgrade your gaming PC, this might be it. The performance leap from older hardware to this combo is massive, and the pricing makes sense for once.

Just don't wait too long to decide. These Newegg combo deals have a habit of disappearing faster than good parking spots at a GameStop midnight release. And trust me, you don't want to be the person explaining to your squad why you're still running 60 FPS while they're all hitting 165+.

Need help putting together the rest of your build? Check out the Shop GPUs at TieredUp Tech selection — sometimes having a local expert beats online shopping, especially when you're dropping this kind of cash on performance that actually matters.

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Sarah

TieredUp Tech, Inc. — Orange, TX

Expert technician at TieredUp Tech, Inc. specializing in custom gaming PC builds, electronics repair, and hardware advice. Serving Orange, TX and the surrounding area.

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