• expired

Ryzen 5 2600 RTX 2080 120GB SSD 8GB DDR4 + Battlefield V $1439, Ryzen 3 2200G GTX 1060 $629 Delivered @ Techfast eBay

640
PUDDING

This popular deal is still available at very good price with Battlefield V game.
Also do not forget to bring the price further down with 5% off gift card .

Estimated Delivery between Tue. 18 Dec. and Thu. 20 Dec


Also, this one seems to be at good price too who are after very cheaper & decent option.

Estimated between Tue. 11 Dec. and Thu. 13 Dec

5% off $100 eBay Digital Gift Cards (Max 5 Cards) @ PayPal Digital Gifts eBay - Thanks to Doweyy

Original PUDDING 10% off Sitewide on eBay Deal Post - Thanks to SaveMoniezzz

Related Stores

eBay Australia
eBay Australia
Marketplace
TechFast
TechFast

closed Comments

                                      • @N1NJ4W4RR10R: 2400 ram and now you're paying $729. You can build a pc with 3200 ram for the same price, why buy this.

                                        • @Budju: Which one are ypu paying $729 for?

                                        • @Budju: Nevermind, the r3 - 1060 deal.

                                          CPU: AMD - Ryzen 3 2200G 3.5 GHz Quad-Core Processor ($149.00 @ Umart)
                                          Motherboard: Asus - PRIME A320M-A Micro ATX AM4 Motherboard ($89.00 @ Mwave Australia)
                                          Memory: Corsair - Vengeance LPX 16 GB (2 x 8 GB) DDR4-2400 Memory ($177.69 @ Amazon Australia)
                                          Storage: Kingston - A400 120 GB 2.5" Solid State Drive ($35.00 @ BudgetPC)
                                          Video Card: PNY - GeForce GTX 1060 6GB 6 GB XLR8 Gaming OC Video Card ($350.65 @ Amazon Australia)
                                          Case: Deepcool - TESSERACT SW ATX Mid Tower Case ($55.00 @ Mwave Australia)
                                          Other: PSU ($40.00)
                                          Total: $896.34

                                          Closest I can get to this deal via pc part picker. Parts as were in my system as possible.

                                          You're looking at an extra $160 for an equivalent system. There's no way in hell you're getting faster memory, a better case, a better PSU and the like for $100 more.

                                          And, of course, they'll all come from different sellers, there won't be a singular warranty and I don't believe shipping is counted (least not to where I live)

                                          Mobo I actually got was the ASUS Prime A-320M-E, but according to google that comes on at an equivalent price to the one I put in the part picker list.

                                • +2

                                  @Budju: All done.

                                  Where's that link?

                                  • +1

                                    @magic8ballgag: I don't believe you.

                                    • +3

                                      @Budju: Oh well, I guess potential buyers will just have this 'sub-par' build to chose from.

  • mine came in a few weeks. maybe i got lucky

    • Which one did you buy? I take it it's not 2080 which rep says is in backorder? Works great?

        1. Working pretty good. Haven't tested any aaa titles yet. Ram might be a bottleneck down the track
  • How does the Ryzen 5 2600 perform for gaming on high settings eg with 2080 or 1080? Am considering 2600x or 2700x (i know that the latter two don't differ too much for gaming but I like the extra cores). i'm just thinking ahead when i upgrade the gpu. cheers

    • +1

      Personally I would get the 2600X unless you plan on overclocking the 2600. I feel a stock 2600 with its relatively low boost clocks will hold back an RTX 2080 class card, particulaly at 1080P. 1440P would be more GPU bound so CPU makes less difference there.

      The 2700X will perform the best by virtue of having the highest boost clocks and more cores (not useful for all games, many can't take advantage of more than 6 cores)

      • yup thought so, thx.

  • I pulled the trigger on this (sorry, this being this seller with a different spec) with the 15% off site wide. Basically paying for the GPU and AMD chip with the rest being replaced. Adding the ram, new mobo, PSU, casing, memory and dvd drive, the entire build is pushing close to $3K now.

    Not sure if its now worth the money for a $3K desktop or use the money to purchase a gaming laptop with all configured nicely and ready to go.

    Thing is I will be losing freight cost sending some items back and also some restocking fees (already gotten the RAM, mobo, hard drive and dvd drive).

    If pressing ahead, I'm not sure when I even get to see the PC, and also worried about the unknown specs that the seller refuses to disclose. Reading some of the posts here, even the supposedly twin fan GPU is now a blower type. Kindda having the "being shafted" type of feel …

    • +3

      I don't understand your thinking here - if you only want the GPU and CPU, then get them directly during the ebay sales for probably a tad under this particular price. The other parts are sellable and considering you basically bought everything else, why not stick a cheap Ryzen 3 into it and sell it for $500 as a low end computer out on ebay?
      Not sure how you went from a $1300 base build PC up to "close to $3k".. $1500 to get everything else sounds a bit on the excessive side unless you went top end for everything (in which again, WHY did you buy this budget build?)
      You compared a $3k Desktop to a $3k laptop - but laptop performance is nowhere near desktops, not to mention that the 2000 series RTX is not available yet on laptops.

      • +1

        Chip/ gpu probably goes around $1.5k with eBay disc. Paid around abit over $1.6k after 15%+5%+1% disc. Rest of parts either to resell or rebuild. Am keeping the monitor to use for now. <— "why purchase this pc"

        "WHY" <— ignoring the RTX2080 and Ryzen 7 2700 chip, the rest may be budget but these two aren't.

        I did not explicitly said that the gaming laptop is the same specs, did I?

        People do things for their own reasons. Your opinion may always seem and sound right to yourself, and it probably is. But it doesn't apply to everyone out there that you are trying to question or school. Have a nice day my friend :-)

        • I'm absolutely with the other fella when it comes to sticking with the PC. Laptop's just can't get the same performance without becoming mobile desktops.

          • @N1NJ4W4RR10R: Agree. The expectation for a PC replacement isnt realistic, hence I was expecting a lower performance laptop in lieu of the PC build (something like the HP Omen mentioned in one of the posts here from a seller based out of WA where its going for slightly above $2K before any ebay discount(s)).

      • Actually what I've been recommending after seeing someone else suggest this.

        If you're only using the CPU and GPU, use the rest to either sell (with an r3 2200g) or give to a family member (2200g/2400g depending on their needs).

        Effectively get a free computer eith your CPU/GPU purchase.

        • +1

          Agree again, that is still my current intention - sell the parts off once I know what I am getting exactly. Personally I dont intend to put in any chip to sell off as a low end build simply because (a) spending more "current" money to sell "later" where "later" is still an unknown in terms of "accepted" monetary value or "confirmed sale" possibility, (b) the hassle of things going wrong when a private seller cant provide build warranty as a disadvantage as compared to other system builders who can provide build warranties, (c) time cost to build and what little consumables cost etc, (d) lastly I cant be arsed to build when I was initially hoping to pay Techfast to match the upgraded parts cost and build it from their end (which of course didnt eventuate because their asking price for upgrade(s) are not economically feasible).

          Its just my preference but hey, some people might enjoy having a crack at doing a simultaneous build, just not me.

    • As a follow-up; Luke replied to my earlier PM and he seems genuinely sincere in trying to assist. While it is too early to say, hopefully, the outcome is positive.

      • +1

        From my interactions they definitely seem like that type of group.

    • Received my order yesterday, hooray!!!

      there is a reference post for buyers who purchased the systems from techfast here, share your experiences =)

  • +1

    An RTX 2080 is going to be CPU bottlenecked by a Ryzen 2600 in BFV according to Techspot / HWUB: https://www.techspot.com/review/1754-battlefield-5-cpu-multi…

    Also 8GB of RAM is going to choke in 64p maps, 16GB is the recommended amount for this game.

    It's not a bad price for the system as a whole, just seems a bit unbalanced to me with a very powerful GPU limited by a modest CPU and not enough RAM

    • +1

      Good link, however you didn't mention that the bottleneck is only at 1080p. The article shows that if you're at 1440p BFV is still GPU bound for the 2700x and 2080. No actual exact benchmarks for the 2600 so we can't be certain of any bottlenecking.

      Personally I picked up an Asus Rog Swift PG279Q 1440p monitor during the ebay sales so I'm still happy with having bought this PC. You're right about the RAM (I grabbed that G.Skill Flare X RAM that was on sale to go with it).

      • +1

        Yeah but that's for a 2700X. There are benchmarks for the 2600X too and it is about 10% slower, and the 2600 from this deal is probably a further 5% behind the 2600X.

        Overclocking the 2600 to 4GHz (basically making it a 2600X) and doulbling the RAM to 16GB would make this a better rounded gaming system.

        • Without benchmarks we really can't say for certain if it'll bottleneck. Also keep in mind this is just one game, general advice I've read onlien suggests the 2600 won't necessarily bottleneck the 2080.

          Also it's an A320 mobo so no CPU overclocking lol. You get what you pay for.

          • +2

            @Subada: Oh shite haha A320, almost forgot that chipset exists.

            Yeah you're right BFV is more CPU bound than most titles, as was BF1 before it. Still, pairing a $1000 GPU with a $200 CPU doesn't really seem that balanced to me, though it does matter less at 1440P.

            In general the Ryzen 5s aren't far off the Ryzen 7s in gaming, agree with you on that.

            • @frugalpetey: https://www.techspot.com/review/1627-core-i5-8400-vs-ryzen-5…

              Benchmarks for the R5 2600 with a 1080ti which is weaker than the 2080 but still (arguably) comparable with current day drivers. These show a clear GPU bottleneck at 1440p on average over 36 games. The performance between 720p and 1080p are pretty close so you could argue that a 2080 the R5 2600 would hold it back.

    • As a side note, ted48g2400c16bk

      Should be the RAM part #, assuming you get the team stick.

      Check ebay for it, comes in around $100 for an extra 8gb stick.

  • A 2600 with a 2080 and a 2200G with a 1060?
    Nice one lads! next up start pairing pentiums with a 2080Ti.

    • Dude. GPU is the bottle neck. Not CPU, 2600 is great. Perfect build for what gamers who are not PC builders want

      • +1

        It's all about balance. The 2600 has a low boost clock and will suffer in certain games as a result. BFV would be one of them, especially in 64p MP which hammers the CPU hard.

        In general I agree that the GPU is more important than the CPU in a gaming system, especially at 1440P or higher resolutions. At 1080P the bottleneck quite often falls back onto the CPU with the higher end GPUs such as the 1080 Ti and the new RTX 2080 class cards

        • You can (mostly) render games higher than the the monitor resolution to soak up any GPU power although the outcome of this varies in what it does for percieved image quality.

      • +1

        It is a small one now and will only get worse in the future while the 2080 will gain performance with driver optimization. You can't OC it either. I'm not a very smart person but buying a prebuilt with low end unbalanced components is not the best idea for a gamer who is NOT a PC builder and could NOT easily troubleshoot any issues which I do believe are very likely to happen especially because I've already seen people complain about the PSUs in this system which is not a good sign when these computers only just started getting popular in the past few months on OZB.
        Just a guy above who reported that his PSU was from a brand called ''Allied'' (what?) and was very noisy out of the box. You're almost forced to upgrade this PC eventually (assuming the allied PSU doesn't kill it first) and with the time and money you waste on doing that suddenly the deal becomes not so great and you will ask yourself why you didn't just spend a bit more in the first place.

        • assuming the allied PSU doesn't kill it first

          People really need to stop claiming that PSUs are killing computers.

          • @Diji1: I meant that as a joke, however I am concerned about the PSU itself dying/being insufficient to provide which is not a joke by any means. Allied is not a brand I have heard of and a quick google search shows me exactly why.

          • @Diji1: Killing comp's is probably an exaggeration. But they'll likely die sooner rather than later. And while they might not take the PC with them, they can be very inconvenient.

            Just annoys me a bit they're going with cheap PSU's rather than something just slightly more expensive. Though there's likely a reason behind it, I'm an Ozbargainer!!!

    • https://www.techspot.com/review/1627-core-i5-8400-vs-ryzen-5…

      Oh no, however will they cope with framerates above 100 FPS, what a disaster.

  • +1

    Yeah wouldnt recommend pc newbies to buy these, I really hope the people buying these are just buying for the cpu and gpu. I would swap out psu minimum

  • +1

    I got dirked around with a 3 month wait for a TV I bought from JB Hifi at boxing day sales, so you can expect to get delays even buying from a large 'reputable' retailer. Sounds like the communication from Techfast is at least better than the customer service bellends I had to deal with over that debacle.

    • Did you ask if they had it in stock???

    • Ironically I got my pc before my keyboard…christ Auspost can suck sometimes.

      Litterally lost the first one, then delayed the second by over a week.

  • This is a great deal. Though 16GB RAM would be much better.

  • +3

    Received my order yesterday (2200G without the graphics card). Also ordered on the 15th. Shipping was abit weird since they pass out the tracking code before its even been sent, but overall, slow delivery time was understandable since there were soo many orders. Very happy with the PC itself. Seems well built; didn't have a chance to tinker with it too much (built for cousins), but they're very happy with it so far. And thanks to Luke for looking after us all Oz-bargainers.

    • +2

      And thank you for the balanced feedback.

Login or Join to leave a comment