Stormcraft RTX 5070 Ti Gaming PC Drops $350 to $2,449 at Newegg

A machine built to handle its own power draw
The Stormcraft's cooling and case design are engineered specifically for high-end configurations.

In the ongoing human pursuit of tools that match ambition to capability, a Stormcraft gaming PC briefly becomes more attainable — discounted $350 to $2,449.99 at Newegg, bundled with a game, and built around hardware that sits at the intersection of serious play and serious work. The machine pairs an RTX 5070 Ti with an Intel i9-14900KF, a combination that speaks to a growing class of users who no longer separate their creative lives from their leisure ones. It is not a bargain in the ordinary sense, but a considered value proposition for those who know exactly what they need.

  • A $350 price cut on a high-end prebuild creates a narrow but real window for buyers who have been watching RTX 5070 Ti systems from a distance.
  • The tension here is familiar: premium hardware at a premium price, where the discount softens the sting but doesn't erase the commitment.
  • Stormcraft's choice of the i9-14900KF over lower-core-count alternatives signals a deliberate design philosophy aimed at hybrid gaming-and-creation workloads.
  • A 360mm AIO cooler and ten-fan case address the thermal reality of pairing a power-hungry CPU with a top-tier GPU — engineering that prevents performance from becoming a liability.
  • At $2,449.99, the build lands meaningfully below RTX 5080 territory, positioning it as the rational ceiling for buyers who don't need to go further.

Newegg is offering a $350 discount on a Stormcraft gaming PC, bringing it to $2,449.99 and including a free copy of 007 First Light. The appeal isn't raw affordability — it's the caliber of what the price buys.

At the heart of the system is an RTX 5070 Ti paired with an Intel Core i9-14900KF. The GPU carries 16GB of GDDR7 memory with fourth-generation ray tracing and fifth-generation tensor cores, making it capable at both 1440p and 4K. The CPU brings 24 cores, 32 threads, and a 6GHz boost clock — hardware that performs equally well in gaming and in the kind of sustained multitasking that video editors and 3D artists depend on. Stormcraft chose it over lower-core Ryzen alternatives specifically because of that hybrid strength.

Supporting the core components are 32GB of DDR5 RAM and a 2TB SSD — the latter increasingly necessary as modern AAA titles routinely exceed 100GB each. Thermal management comes via a 360mm AIO liquid cooler and a case built with ten RGB fans, a deliberate response to the heat the i9-14900KF generates under load.

The discount doesn't bring this to its lowest recent price, but it places the build in favorable territory against RTX 5080 systems that cost considerably more. For buyers whose machines need to serve both play and profession, the Stormcraft offers a coherent, high-performance answer — not cheap, but worth the cost if you'll use everything it offers.

Newegg is running a $350 discount on a Stormcraft gaming PC that lands at $2,449.99, and the machine comes bundled with a free copy of 007 First Light. For anyone shopping in the high-end prebuild market, this is worth a close look—not because it's the cheapest option out there, but because of what you're actually getting for the money.

The core of the system is built around an RTX 5070 Ti graphics card paired with an Intel Core i9-14900KF processor. That's a pairing designed for people who want to play demanding games at 1440p and 4K, but also need serious horsepower for creative work. The i9-14900KF brings 24 cores and 32 threads to the table, along with a 6GHz boost clock and 36MB of L3 cache. It's the kind of CPU that excels equally at gaming and at the kind of multitasking that content creators live in—video editing, 3D work, rendering. Stormcraft chose it partly to keep costs down compared to some competing builds, but also because it's genuinely better suited to hybrid workloads than the lower-core-count Ryzen chips you sometimes see paired with this GPU tier.

The RTX 5070 Ti itself carries 16GB of GDDR7 memory, fourth-generation ray tracing cores, and fifth-generation tensor cores. That combination means it handles 1440p gaming smoothly and offers solid 4K performance, while also being capable enough for serious 3D work and other GPU-intensive creative tasks. It's one of the better graphics cards on the market right now, and it sits in a price-to-performance sweet spot that makes more sense than jumping up to an RTX 5080 system.

The rest of the build is engineered to support that level of performance. You get 32GB of DDR5 memory, which keeps demanding games running smoothly and lets you work with large, complex files in creative applications without the system bogging down. Storage is a 2TB SSD—increasingly the baseline for serious gamers, since modern AAA titles can easily consume 100GB or more per game. The cooling system is a 360mm AIO liquid cooler paired with a roomy case and ten RGB fans. That matters because the i9-14900KF runs hot, and Stormcraft designed this case specifically to manage the thermal load of a high-powered configuration like this one.

At $2,449.99, this isn't the lowest price the system has hit in the past month, but it's still a solid discount and it positions the build well against competing RTX 5080 systems that cost significantly more. For someone building a machine that needs to handle both serious gaming and professional creative work, this Stormcraft prebuild delivers the kind of balanced, high-performance architecture that justifies the price. The question isn't whether it's cheap—it isn't—but whether you need what it can do.

The i9-14900KF is as good for gaming as it is for multitasking and demanding creative tasks, with 24 cores and 32 threads better suited to content creators than lower core count alternatives.
— Stormcraft/PC Guide analysis
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why would someone spend twenty-five hundred dollars on a prebuild instead of assembling the parts themselves?

Model

Time, mostly. And confidence. You're paying for someone to have already figured out which components work together, tested the thermals, handled the warranty. For a lot of people, that's worth the premium.

Inventor

But the specs seem aimed at two different kinds of people—gamers and content creators. Why bundle them together?

Model

Because they're increasingly the same person. Someone streaming gameplay, or making YouTube videos about games, or doing 3D work alongside gaming. The i9-14900KF is expensive, but it's built for exactly that overlap. A pure gaming CPU would be overkill; a pure creative CPU might bottleneck the GPU.

Inventor

Is this actually a good deal, or is that marketing language?

Model

It's a real discount—$350 off—but you're still in premium territory. The value isn't in the price; it's in the engineering. The cooling system, the case design, the component pairing. You're paying for a system that was built to handle its own power draw.

Inventor

What happens if someone buys this and just plays games?

Model

They'll have an excellent 1440p experience and strong 4K performance. They'll also have 32GB of RAM and a 24-core CPU they're not fully using. It's like buying a truck when you need a car—it works fine, but you're carrying capacity you don't need.

Inventor

And if they're a creator who doesn't game much?

Model

Then they're overpaying for the GPU. They could get a workstation card and save money. This machine assumes you're doing both things seriously.

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