ASUS ROG G700 with RTX 5070 Ti drops to $2,299.99, lowest price in 30 days

A machine that excels across multiple disciplines
The ASUS ROG G700 is designed for gaming and creative work equally, not gaming first.

In the ever-accelerating pursuit of capable computing, a well-configured machine occasionally surfaces at a price that invites genuine reflection. The ASUS ROG G700, now $200 reduced to $2,299.99 on Amazon, is less a fleeting bargain than a considered artifact — a system built not for a single purpose, but for the breadth of what modern creative and gaming life demands. It asks its buyer not what they want to spend, but what they truly intend to do.

  • A $200 price drop brings the ASUS ROG G700 to its lowest point in a month, creating a narrow but real window for high-end prebuilt shoppers.
  • The tension lies in the machine's identity: the RTX 5070 Ti and Intel Core Ultra 7 265KF prioritize versatility over raw gaming dominance, which may frustrate pure frame-rate chasers.
  • Thirty-two gigabytes of DDR5 RAM and a 240mm AIO cooler signal serious intent for sustained workloads, but a single 1TB SSD will pressure anyone with a large game library.
  • At $2,299.99, the G700 sits uncomfortably close to RTX 5080 prebuilts near $2,500, forcing buyers to honestly weigh whether the step up is worth it for 4K or heavy 3D work.
  • The machine is landing as a strong contender for creators who also game — not as the cheapest path to power, but as one of the more balanced ones available right now.

Amazon has discounted the ASUS ROG G700 gaming PC to $2,299.99 — a $200 reduction and its lowest price in recent weeks. It's not a screaming deal, but the machine behind the discount is genuinely worth considering.

The G700's defining quality is balance. ASUS paired an RTX 5070 Ti — built with fourth-gen ray tracing cores, fifth-gen tensor cores, and 16GB of GDDR7 memory — with an Intel Core Ultra 7 265KF featuring 20 performance and 20 efficiency cores. That processor brings more total threads than gaming-focused alternatives like the Ryzen 7 9800X3D, making this system as comfortable in video editing or 3D workflows as it is in a game session. The RTX 5070 Ti handles 1440p with ease and manages 4K reasonably well, though it isn't the card of choice if 4K is your primary ambition.

Supporting the build is 32GB of DDR5 RAM — enough for demanding creative tasks — alongside a 1TB SSD that's adequate but will require management for large libraries. Cooling is handled by a 240mm AIO and quad-fan setup, and an 850W power supply leaves room for future upgrades. The ROG aesthetic, with dual tempered glass and RGB lighting, makes no attempt to hide its intentions.

The real question at this price is context. RTX 5080 prebuilts hover just under $2,500, close enough to make comparison worthwhile if 4K gaming or serious 3D work is the goal. But for those who want a machine that moves fluidly between disciplines — creative work, multitasking, and solid gaming — the G700 occupies a genuine sweet spot. The value isn't in the discount. It's in whether the machine's particular balance matches the life you're actually living.

Amazon has marked down the ASUS ROG G700 gaming PC to $2,299.99, a $200 reduction that represents its lowest asking price over the past month. For anyone shopping in the higher-end prebuilt market, this is the kind of deal worth pausing on—not because it's a screaming bargain, but because the machine itself is genuinely well-thought-out.

The core appeal here is balance. This isn't a PC engineered purely to chase frame rates. Instead, ASUS has paired an RTX 5070 Ti graphics card with an Intel Core Ultra 7 265KF processor, a combination that tilts toward versatility. The Intel chip brings 20 performance cores and 20 efficiency cores—more total threads than gaming-focused alternatives like the Ryzen 7 9800X3D—which means this system handles multitasking, content creation, and heavy creative workflows with genuine competence. The RTX 5070 Ti itself is a capable card, built on the latest architecture with fourth-generation ray tracing cores, fifth-generation tensor cores, and 16GB of GDDR7 memory. It's designed to handle 1440p gaming comfortably and can manage 4K gaming reasonably well, though it's not the card you'd choose if 4K is your primary target.

The supporting cast matters too. Thirty-two gigabytes of DDR5 RAM gives the system real staying power for demanding tasks—video editing, 3D work, heavy multitasking—not just gaming. The storage is a single 1TB SSD, which is adequate for a handful of large games plus your working files, though anyone with a substantial library will need to manage space carefully or add external storage. Cooling comes from a 240mm all-in-one liquid cooler for the CPU paired with a quad-fan setup, sufficient for sustained heavy loads. The power supply is rated at 850 watts, enough for this configuration with room for future upgrades. The case itself is built around ASUS's ROG design language—dual tempered glass panels, RGB lighting, the kind of aesthetic that signals gaming intent without apology.

At $2,299.99, this machine sits in an interesting position. You're close enough to RTX 5080 prebuilts—which have been spotted at just under $2,500 from builders like Stormcraft—that the comparison is worth making. If your primary use case is 4K gaming or if you're planning serious 3D work, stepping up to an RTX 5080 might be the smarter move. But if you want a machine that excels across multiple disciplines, that won't choke on creative tasks while still delivering solid gaming performance, this ASUS ROG hits a real sweet spot. The question isn't whether it's the cheapest option in its class. It's whether the balance it offers matches what you actually need to do.

This isn't a PC engineered purely to chase frame rates. Instead, ASUS has paired an RTX 5070 Ti graphics card with an Intel Core Ultra 7 265KF processor, a combination that tilts toward versatility.
— Product analysis
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why does this PC matter right now? There are a lot of gaming machines out there.

Model

Because it's not trying to be the fastest gaming machine. It's trying to be useful for multiple things at once—gaming, sure, but also editing video, working in 3D, handling a dozen browser tabs. That's a different design choice than most gaming PCs make.

Inventor

The processor has more cores than the Ryzen 7 9800X3D, but that chip is famous for gaming. Isn't this a compromise?

Model

It is, but a deliberate one. The Intel chip trades some pure gaming performance for genuine multitasking ability. If you're only gaming, the Ryzen is probably faster. If you're switching between games and creative work, the Intel breathes easier.

Inventor

What about the graphics card? Is the RTX 5070 Ti enough for modern games?

Model

At 1440p, absolutely. At 4K, it depends on the game and your frame rate expectations. It's capable but not dominant. That's actually honest positioning—they're not pretending this is a 4K beast.

Inventor

The storage is just 1TB. That feels tight.

Model

It is. You can fit maybe four or five AAA games on there comfortably, plus your OS and other files. Anyone with a large library will need to be thoughtful about what they keep installed, or add external drives.

Inventor

At $2,299.99, how does this compare to stepping up to an RTX 5080?

Model

You're maybe $200 away from RTX 5080 prebuilts. If 4K gaming is your main goal, or if you're doing serious 3D work, that extra $200 might be worth it. But if you want a machine that's genuinely good at multiple things, this one does that without the premium.

Inventor

Who should actually buy this?

Model

Someone who games but also creates—edits video, works in design software, does content production. Someone who wants build quality and doesn't need to optimize purely for frame rates. Someone who values versatility over specialization.

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