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This $1,705 9950X3D2 Combo Deal Is Actually Insane for PC Components

J
Jordan
April 29, 2026
6 min read

This $1,705 9950X3D2 Combo Deal Is Actually Insane for PC Components

Holy crap. Newegg just dropped a combo deal that's making me question reality. We're talking about AMD's brand new dual-X3D beast, the Ryzen 9 9950X3D2, bundled with 32GB of DDR5-6400, a 2TB NVMe SSD, and an Asus ROG Strix motherboard for $1,704.99. That's a 20% discount on what would normally cost you over $2,100 if you bought these PC components separately.

But here's the kicker — you're essentially getting that Corsair Vengeance DDR5 kit for just $56 after the discount math. That's not a typo.

Breaking Down This Absolutely Bonkers Gaming Hardware Deal

Let me run the numbers because this is genuinely wild. The 9950X3D2 alone is selling for around $650-700 right now. The Asus ROG Strix X670E motherboard? That's another $300-350. The 2TB WD Black SN7100 SSD typically runs $180-200. Add up just those three computer parts and you're already at $1,130-1,250.

So where does that leave the 32GB DDR5-6400 kit? Basic math puts it at around $454-574 from the total bundle price. But here's where it gets spicy — Corsair Vengeance DDR5-6400 kits usually retail for $120-140. With the 20% bundle discount factored in, you're effectively paying about $56 for RAM that would cost $120 standalone.

Translation: you're saving roughly $64 on the RAM alone, plus getting bulk discounts on everything else.

Why the 9950X3D2 Changes Everything for Competitive Gaming

Okay, real talk. The dual-X3D design is a game-changer for how we think about CPU performance in FPS titles. You've got two CCX clusters, each with their own 3D V-Cache stack. That means consistent frame times in games like CS2, Valorant, and Apex Legends where cache misses can cause those annoying micro-stutters that get you killed.

I've been testing similar setups at our shop here in Orange, TX, and the difference is noticeable. We're talking about 1% lows that stay consistently higher, which translates to smoother gameplay when things get hectic.

Hot take: this chip might actually be overkill for most gamers, but if you're serious about competitive play or streaming while gaming, that extra cache is clutch. The 9950X3D2 doesn't just deliver higher average fps — it delivers consistent fps.

DDR5-6400: Finally Fast Enough to Matter

Remember when DDR5 first dropped and everyone was like "meh, DDR4-3200 is fine"? Yeah, those days are dead. The Corsair Vengeance DDR5-6400 in this kit actually makes a difference in modern titles, especially with X3D chips that can actually utilize the extra bandwidth.

In Cyberpunk 2077 with ray tracing? You're looking at 8-12% better 1% lows compared to DDR5-5600. Tarkov? Even bigger gains because that game is just poorly optimized chaos that somehow benefits from throwing more bandwidth at it.

But here's what really matters for competitive gaming: memory latency. DDR5-6400 with tight timings can shave 2-3ms off your system latency. That might not sound like much, but when you're holding angles in CS2 or trying to hit flicks in Valorant, every millisecond counts.

The WD Black SN7100: Solid but Not Spectacular

Honestly, the 2TB WD Black SN7100 is the most "whatever" part of this bundle. It's not bad — sequential reads around 7,000 MB/s are perfectly fine for gaming. But it's not going to blow your mind either.

What it will do is give you enough space for your entire Steam library without playing the "which games do I delete this week" game. Plus, DirectStorage is finally becoming relevant in new titles, so having fast NVMe storage actually matters now for things like texture streaming in games like Forspoken and upcoming releases.

Is it the fastest SSD you can buy? Nope. Is it fast enough that you'll never notice the difference while gaming? Absolutely.

Asus ROG Strix X670E: The Foundation That Actually Matters

Here's where this combo gets really smart. The Asus ROG Strix X670E isn't just some throwaway board — it's actually a solid foundation for this build. You're getting PCIe 5.0 for future GPU upgrades, multiple M.2 slots for storage expansion, and robust VRM cooling that can handle the 9950X3D2 at full boost without breaking a sweat.

The networking is on point too. 2.5Gb Ethernet means no bottlenecks if you've got fast internet, and the WiFi 6E is reliable for wireless gaming (though please, just use ethernet for competitive play).

Personally, I think the ROG Strix lineup hits the sweet spot between features and price. You're not paying for RGB nonsense you don't need, but you're getting the connectivity and overclocking support that actually matters.

But Should You Actually Buy This?

Look, I'll be straight with you. This deal is genuinely good, but it's not for everyone. If you're building your first gaming PC or upgrading from something ancient, this might be overkill. The 9950X3D2 is a beast, but it's a beast that most people won't fully utilize.

Who should grab this? Content creators who game. Streamers who need the extra cores for encoding. Competitive players who want every possible advantage. People who keep their PCs for 5+ years and want something that'll stay relevant.

Who should skip it? Anyone on a tight budget. Casual gamers who play at 1080p 60fps. People who just want to play Rocket League and browse Reddit.

The math works out if you were already planning to buy these tier of components. But don't convince yourself you need this level of performance just because the deal exists.

What This Means for the Gaming Hardware Market

Newegg dropping combo deals like this signals that retailers are getting aggressive about moving inventory before next-gen stuff drops. We're probably going to see more bundles like this as companies try to clear stock.

For builders, this is great news. Competition drives prices down, and bundles eliminate the compatibility guesswork. Everything in this kit plays nice together — no weird RAM compatibility issues, no motherboard BIOS headaches, no "will this fit" questions.

If you're looking for something more customizable or want to pick your own components, check out our BitCrate Custom Gaming PCs where you can spec exactly what you want. But for pure value on high-end parts? This Newegg combo is tough to beat.

The deal probably won't last long — good combo deals never do. If you've been waiting to pull the trigger on a high-end AMD build, this might be your moment. Just don't blame me when you start seeing frame rates you never thought possible.

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Jordan

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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