Newegg cuts $300 off RTX 5080 gaming PC with Ryzen 7 9800X3D to $2,799.99

Built for extracting high frame rates with minimal latency
The Ryzen 7 9800X3D's cache and clock speed are optimized for gaming performance, not raw core count.

In the ongoing human pursuit of immersive digital experience, a moment arrives where premium technology briefly bends toward accessibility. Newegg is offering the Stormcraft Phantom — a high-end gaming PC anchored by an RTX 5080 and Ryzen 7 9800X3D — at $2,799.99, a $300 reduction that positions serious 4K gaming within slightly closer reach. The machine represents not merely a collection of components, but a considered philosophy: that responsiveness, longevity, and readiness matter as much as raw specification. For those weighing the cost of entry against the cost of compromise, this window is worth pausing to examine.

  • RTX 5080 builds rarely dip below $3,000 when paired with a top-tier X3D processor, making this $300 discount a meaningful shift in the value equation.
  • The Ryzen 7 9800X3D's 96MB L3 cache and 5.3GHz boost clock create a CPU purpose-built for gaming latency, not just benchmark scores.
  • A 360mm AIO cooler, 850W Gold-rated PSU, and seven fans signal that thermal and power headroom were engineered in — not afterthoughts.
  • The included mechanical keyboard and mouse, 32GB DDR5, and 2TB SSD mean the system is genuinely plug-and-play from day one.
  • The AM5 socket and B850 motherboard preserve a future upgrade path, softening the weight of today's investment against tomorrow's hardware.

The Stormcraft Phantom is currently listed on Newegg at $2,799.99 — $300 off its regular price — and for anyone serious about 4K gaming, the configuration warrants attention.

At its heart is a pairing that gaming-focused builders tend to prioritize: an RTX 5080 with 16GB of GDDR7 memory, fourth-gen ray tracing cores, and fifth-gen tensor cores, matched to a Ryzen 7 9800X3D. The 9800X3D's reputation rests not on core count but on its 96MB L3 cache and 5.3GHz boost clock — a combination tuned specifically for high frame rates and low latency, whether in competitive play or expansive open-world titles.

The supporting hardware is equally deliberate. Thirty-two gigabytes of DDR5 handles asset-heavy games comfortably, while the 2TB SSD accommodates a real library of modern titles without constant management. The B850 motherboard's AM5 socket means a future CPU upgrade remains a straightforward option rather than a full rebuild.

Cooling is handled by a 360mm all-in-one liquid cooler backed by seven RGB fans — thermal infrastructure designed for sustained loads without throttling. The 850W 80+ Gold power supply adds efficiency and headroom. Practically, the bundle includes a mechanical keyboard and mouse, so the machine is ready to use the moment a monitor is connected.

What makes this price point notable is context: RTX 5080 systems with X3D processors typically approach or exceed $3,000. This build undercuts that threshold while preserving the components that make it feel like a long-term investment. Competing options from Skytech, iBuyPower, and CyberpowerPC exist at similar prices, but for a gaming-first machine that leaves little reason to wish you'd spent more, the Stormcraft Phantom earns serious consideration.

A Stormcraft Phantom gaming PC is on sale at Newegg for $2,799.99, down $300 from its regular price. For someone serious about 4K gaming without breaking the bank, this machine deserves a look.

The core of the build is a pairing that matters: an RTX 5080 graphics card matched with a Ryzen 7 9800X3D processor. The GPU brings 16GB of GDDR7 memory, fourth-generation ray tracing cores, and fifth-generation tensor cores—the hardware you need to push modern games at high resolution with ray tracing enabled. But the real story is the CPU choice. The 9800X3D is widely considered the best gaming processor available right now, and not because it has the most cores or threads. Instead, it leans hard into what gamers actually need: a massive 96MB of L3 cache paired with a 5.3GHz boost clock. That combination is built for extracting high frame rates with minimal latency, the kind of responsiveness that matters when you're playing competitively or just want smooth, fluid gameplay.

The rest of the system is built to support that gaming focus without cutting corners. You get 32GB of DDR5 memory, which is the right amount for asset-heavy games like sprawling open-world titles and complex simulators. The 2TB SSD is equally important—modern AAA games routinely exceed 100GB, so having that storage capacity means you can actually keep a decent library installed without constant uninstalling and reinstalling. The motherboard is a higher-end B850 model, which matters because it uses the AM5 socket, giving you a clear upgrade path if you want to swap in a newer processor down the line.

Cooling gets serious attention too. The system includes a 360mm all-in-one liquid cooler for the CPU, backed by seven RGB fans. That's the kind of thermal solution designed to handle sustained heavy loads without throttling performance. The power supply is an 850W unit with 80+ Gold efficiency certification, meaning it delivers ample wattage while minimizing waste heat. The case itself is described as higher-end, suggesting better build quality and airflow than budget alternatives.

One practical detail: the PC ships with a mechanical gaming keyboard and mouse included. That means you're not buying a headless box—you can plug it in, connect a monitor, and start playing immediately. You'll still need to source a 4K or 1440p display, but the machine itself is ready to go.

At $2,799.99, this configuration sits at an interesting price point. RTX 5080 builds typically cost more, and when they do include an X3D processor, they usually push closer to or past the $3,000 mark. This deal undercuts that while maintaining the premium components that make the system feel like a genuine investment rather than a compromise. If you're comparing options, other manufacturers like Skytech, iBuyPower, and CyberpowerPC offer similarly priced alternatives with their own strengths, so it's worth checking what else is available. But for a gaming-first machine that won't leave you wishing you'd spent more, this Stormcraft build is worth serious consideration.

The Ryzen 7 9800X3D is pretty much the best gaming CPU for most people, ideal for high-fps gaming and can deliver outstanding performance with low latency.
— PC Guide review
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Inventor

Why does pairing an RTX 5080 with a Ryzen 7 9800X3D matter so much? Wouldn't an Intel CPU work just as well?

Model

The 9800X3D is built differently. It prioritizes L3 cache—96MB of it—which is what gaming actually needs. Intel chips tend to have more cores, which helps with creative work, but for pure gaming performance and frame rates, the cache and clock speed of the 9800X3D is the better choice.

Inventor

So this is a gaming machine first, not a workstation?

Model

Exactly. If you needed to do video editing or 3D rendering alongside gaming, you'd want more cores. But if gaming is the priority, this is the right configuration.

Inventor

Is $2,799.99 actually a good price for what you're getting?

Model

It's competitive. RTX 5080 builds with this much memory and storage typically cost more. You're saving $300 here, and you're not sacrificing on cooling, power delivery, or the motherboard quality. That matters.

Inventor

What's the upgrade path like?

Model

The AM5 socket means you can swap in a newer Ryzen processor in a few years without replacing the motherboard. That's real future-proofing, not just marketing language.

Inventor

Does it actually come ready to use?

Model

Keyboard and mouse are included, so yes. You just need a monitor and you're gaming. That's rare at this price point.

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