iBuyPower RX 9070 XT gaming PC hits 30-day low at $2,299.99

A complete gaming setup that needs only a monitor to run
The iBuyPower system ships with keyboard and mouse included, eliminating the need to source additional peripherals.

In the ongoing human pursuit of immersive digital experience, a high-end gaming machine has quietly reached its most accessible price point in a month — not during a grand sales spectacle, but in the ordinary passage of time. The iBuyPower Element Pro, pairing AMD's latest GPU and CPU architectures, arrives at Newegg for $2,299.99, offering a complete, ready-to-use system for those who seek serious gaming performance without assembling the pieces themselves. It is a reminder that the market, like most things, moves in rhythms — and that patience occasionally rewards those who are watching.

  • A 30-day price floor has been reached on a premium gaming PC, creating a narrow window of opportunity for buyers who have been waiting on the sidelines.
  • The claimed $700 discount carries a shadow of skepticism — the original $3,000 list price appears artificially elevated, meaning the true savings may be considerably more modest than advertised.
  • The hardware combination of an RX 9070 XT and Ryzen 7 9800X3D positions this build as a direct challenger to pricier Nvidia-based systems, intensifying the competitive tension in the high-end prebuilt market.
  • The deal lands during an unusually quiet sales period, making its appearance outside a major promotional event a signal worth heeding for anyone actively shopping this performance tier.

Newegg is currently offering the iBuyPower Element Pro gaming PC at $2,299.99 — its lowest price in the past 30 days — with a claimed $700 reduction from its original asking price. The system centers on two of AMD's most capable recent components: the RX 9070 XT graphics card, built on the RDNA 4 architecture with 16GB of video memory, and the Ryzen 7 9800X3D processor, which brings eight cores, a 5.2GHz boost clock, and an unusually large 96MB L3 cache engineered specifically to reduce frame latency and stutter in games.

The RX 9070 XT competes directly with Nvidia's RTX 5070 Ti in raw performance while typically undercutting it on price in prebuilt configurations. It handles 1440p gaming with ease and manages 4K at reasonable frame rates — enough for players who prioritize visual fidelity without demanding absolute maximum settings. The 9800X3D, meanwhile, runs cooler than its predecessor and carries enough threading capability to support streaming or light content creation alongside its primary gaming focus.

Supporting the core components are 32GB of DDR5 RAM, a 2TB SSD, and a 360mm liquid cooling system with RGB fans. The package also includes a keyboard and mouse, meaning a buyer needs only a monitor to have a fully operational setup — no component hunting, no assembly required.

The $700 discount deserves measured scrutiny. The original list price of nearly $3,000 appears inflated against what these components would cost individually, so the real-world savings are likely smaller than the headline implies. Even so, at $2,299.99, the system is competitively priced against RTX 5070 Ti alternatives and arrives at its monthly low during a period with no major sales events on the horizon — a combination that makes independent component verification worthwhile before committing.

Newegg is currently selling an iBuyPower Element Pro gaming PC for $2,299.99, a price that represents the machine's lowest point over the past month and comes with a claimed $700 discount from its original asking price. The system pairs an AMD RX 9070 XT graphics card with a Ryzen 7 9800X3D processor—a combination that delivers serious gaming performance without the premium price tag of comparable Nvidia-based builds.

The RX 9070 XT is built on AMD's RDNA 4 architecture and carries 16GB of dedicated video memory. It's positioned as a direct competitor to Nvidia's RTX 5070 Ti, offering comparable raw performance in many scenarios while typically costing less when bundled into a prebuilt system like this one. The card handles 1440p gaming comfortably and can manage 4K gaming with reasonable frame rates, making it suitable for players who want high visual fidelity without necessarily maxing every setting.

The Ryzen 7 9800X3D is the CPU doing the heavy lifting here. With eight cores, sixteen threads, a 5.2GHz boost clock, and an unusually large 96MB L3 cache, it's engineered primarily for gaming performance. That cache size is what gives it an edge in frame rates and consistency—less frame latency, fewer stutters. The processor also runs cooler than its predecessor, the 7800X3D, which matters in a system like this one. Beyond gaming, the chip has enough threading to handle streaming or light content creation work, though it's clearly optimized for frame rates first.

The rest of the build rounds out the picture. Thirty-two gigabytes of DDR5 RAM ensures smooth performance in demanding open-world games and simulators, and reduces the microstuttering that can plague systems with less memory when running AAA titles. The 2TB solid-state drive gives you room for a substantial game library—even accounting for modern AAA games that can consume 100GB or more of storage space individually. A 360mm liquid cooling system with RGB fans keeps both the GPU and CPU running at optimal temperatures during extended gaming sessions.

What makes this particular deal noteworthy is the completeness of the package. The system ships with a keyboard and mouse included, meaning a buyer needs only to add a monitor to have a fully functional gaming setup ready to use. There's no hunting for compatible peripherals, no assembly of disparate parts—it's a plug-and-play solution for someone ready to start gaming immediately.

The $700 discount warrants some skepticism, however. The original list price of nearly $3,000 appears inflated relative to what the individual components would typically cost if priced separately. The actual savings are likely smaller than the headline suggests. Still, at $2,299.99, the system sits in a competitive position: it's cheaper than most RTX 5070 Ti and Ryzen 7 9800X3D combinations while delivering similar performance in many gaming scenarios, and it's expensive enough to reflect the quality of the components inside. The timing also favors buyers. We're currently in a relatively quiet period for major sales events, so finding a system at its 30-day low outside of a major promotional window is worth noting. Anyone considering a high-end gaming PC should verify the component pricing independently, but this deal appears solid for the performance tier.

The RX 9070 XT gives the RTX 5070 Ti a run for its money from a raw performance perspective, and is generally more affordable when paired with a Ryzen 7 9800X3D in a prebuild.
— PC Guide review
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Inventor

Why does the RX 9070 XT matter here instead of just going with Nvidia?

Model

The AMD card gives you nearly identical gaming performance to Nvidia's RTX 5070 Ti, but when it's bundled into a prebuilt like this, it typically costs less. You're not sacrificing much in actual frame rates, especially at 1440p.

Inventor

Is 32GB of RAM overkill for gaming?

Model

Not anymore. Modern AAA games, especially open-world titles, can stutter on 16GB if you're running other things in the background. Thirty-two gigs keeps everything smooth, and it future-proofs you a bit.

Inventor

What's the deal with that huge L3 cache on the Ryzen chip?

Model

That's what makes the 9800X3D special for gaming. More cache means the CPU can hold more data closer to where it needs it, so you get fewer frame stutters and more consistent frame rates. It's a gaming-specific advantage.

Inventor

The $700 discount sounds too good to be true.

Model

It probably is, honestly. The original $3,000 list price looks inflated. The real savings are probably closer to $300 or $400 if you price the components separately. But even at $2,299.99, it's still competitive.

Inventor

Why include the keyboard and mouse?

Model

It removes friction. A lot of people buying a $2,300 PC don't want to spend another $150 sourcing peripherals. You unbox it, plug in a monitor, and you're gaming. That convenience has real value.

Inventor

Is now a good time to buy, or should I wait for a sale?

Model

We're in a quiet sales period right now, so this is actually one of the better times to find a deal. If you wait for Black Friday or a major event, prices might drop further, but there's no guarantee.

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