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Ryzen 9 3900X RX 5700 XT Gaming PC (16G/X570/480G/750W Gold): $1999 + $29 Delivery @ Techfast

650
3900X-5700XT-BD

Great Price. The system starts at $1699 with RX570 4GB
Choose "Graphics Card* — AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT 8GB Graphics Card" on upgrades and Apply code at checkout to get it for $1999.
Its $200 cheaper compare of last Black Friday Deal with RX 5700 XT: $2199.

Enjoy :)

Spec:

  • Ryzen 9 3900X
  • Guaranteed MSI Mech RX 5700 XT 8GB - (Add via upgrade option)
  • 16GB 2666MHz RAM ($29 Upgrade to 16GB 3200MHz)
  • 480GB 2.5" SSD
  • X570 motherboard (brand may vary but has been MSI or Gigabyte; Asus Tuf WiFi X570 Upgrade $59)
  • Gigabyte G750H 750W 80+ Gold PSU
  • Deepcool Tesseract SW Case ($39 upgrade to Deepcool Matrexx 55)

Related Stores

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closed Comments

  • @OP: I think you made a tiny typo there, the price after discount is 1699, not 1999. You did type it in the description though

    • +4

      that's for the RX 570, not the RX 5700.

      • Derp, thanks

    • Actually, $1999 Price after discount is for RX 5700 XT in title is highlighted which is $200 cheaper compare to previous deals.

  • Does the Deepcool Matrexx 55 upgrade case have PSU shroud, Luke?

    • +2

      Yep it does.

  • +1

    Thanks BA! Hopefully this appeals to the folks who have asked for R9 deals. Plenty of other R5 and R7 deals on our account page too.

    • +2

      Curious to anyone who negged this, what reason would you have to even neg this? There's nothing to even neg?

    • -1

      Any chance we can get a sweet R5 2600 and 5700/5700 XT build? They are both really great value components, even today.

  • Would this PC build need a lot of upgrades if i plan on using it to stream and game?

    • +2

      no it's well specced.

    • +2

      Just pay for the 3200mhz ram up front

    • +5

      But I think you'd need to ask yourself if 3900X/RX5700 is the right balance for what you want to do vs. a system with say a 3700X and a better GPU?

      • -2

        NVIDIA have better GPUs for streaming IMHO

        • Irrelevant with a CPU like this.

      • Would it help if i mentioned that i also plan on using the PC to also do things like graphic design, artwork and possibly 3D modelling in the future? So it would need to be multi-purpose. Reading reviews and articles online seems to indicate that a 3900X would be best for my needs, but i am open to suggestions.

        EDIT:

        Just wanted to add that i'm trying to decide between buying a pre-built PC or building one myself which is why i'm looking at options. So if i do need to change or upgrade a number of parts i will probably be heading towards building a PC myself as i would like to have everything ready to go all at once.

        • I would also suggest upping the RAM to 32gig, cpu is perfect for that workload, the gfx card is between a 2060 super and a 2070 super so 1440p gaming is where the sweet spot is for the card. If your a confident pc builder then get the parts that best serve what you want to use it for otherwise this is as good as the prices get for this combination of parts.

          Edit: Oh and a Nvme ssd Card :)

  • Is it possible to buy it with no gpu and no ssd/hdd?

    • +2

      Buy then sell parts you don’t need ? :)

      • +3

        Yeah, I'm just being lazy.

        • +1

          Yeh selling is def not for everyone… So gotta agree with you there..

      • -4

        I agree, Techfast should allow you to remove components to bring down the price.

        • They sell whole systems, not components or barebones. You want these, go elsewhere

          • -6

            @suburbanmale: Well I have plenty of friends who have perfectly good SSD's and RAM, they merely want to upgrade to a prebuilt with the mobo, CPU and graphics card preinstalled. They want to basically just put in the RAM and the m.2 drive and then get going, as they are afraid they may ruin the CPU pins if they install it themselves.

            • +2

              @KARMAAA: Pretty hard to test a system build, provide warranty or support when the end user adds their own (new/used/whatever) components tbh…

              Equally difficult for a budget/volume online PC builder to cater for individual scenarios - example - the kinda unique situation of your many friends; who all have suitable DDR4 ram and ssds already, are comfortable slotting the ram and an m2 into a mobo, configing bios and OS, but none are confident to slot a CPU in…

              It is interesting however to find out there are many people out there with RAM and m2 drives looking for otherwise prebuilt systems.

              • -1

                @buffalo bill:

                It is interesting however to find out there are many people out there with RAM and m2 drives looking for otherwise prebuilt systems.

                They are the type of people who buy a PS4 with a 500GB HDD and they upgrade it to a 4TB or 2TB model. They obviously know some things, but they don't feel super confident in tinkering with everything. It's understandable. When I was younger, I felt the same way.

                Plus, putting in an M.2 SSD and screwing it in isn't exactly difficult either, so I can see why they are okay with doing it. RAM very similar, just slot it in there and push it down. Simple concepts they understand

                But I can see TechFast's perspective too, they cannot provide QC and warranty on a product that isn't fully assembled and working. It would more than likely inundate them with calls for tech support or returns. So I see both perspectives.

                I myself find it interesting that there are people out there who wouldn't mind mixing and matching and who merely want to upgrade the "core" components of the system which impact performance the most. I try to tell them it's not that hard to build their own PC. But they either tell me "I don't have the time" or "I'm afraid I will bend the pins or ruin something". There's no pleasing everyone it seems.

  • will there be a 1660ti deal anytime soon ;-;

    • +1

      1660s will have replaced that for Techfast. Not sure if they currently have any deals on that though.

      Alternatively, wait™ for CES to see what the 5600/xt has to offer.

      • I think we'll see something 2060ish in performance but they need to price it better than they did with 5500 which wasn't even a great performer…

        • Current leaked 5600 XT shows performance between 30-35% faster than the 5500 XT in FireStrike and TimeSpy. These usually scale much better than games. But let's take the upper end of 35% as the performance as a best case scenario. You're looking at between RX Vega 56 and GTX 1070 Ti performance. Not quite 2060 performance which is around ~10% more.

          But very close. Maybe with a nice undervolt and OC it can reach within 2-5% of RTX 2060 performance.

        • The 5500xt is a good GPU, just terribly priced. Should've been far closer to the 570/560 considering the performance it offered. I'm kinda with HWUB on this being thanks to AMD not wanting to give to much 7nm supply to a low end sku.

          5600xt should be better priced if that is the case, as it'd probably be sitting closer to the $300US mark. If it does give vega 56/1070ti like performance it'd be a pretty decent bump over the 1660s, so could probably justify $280~. Hopefully we also see a 5600, ideally performing around 1660ti levels for $240~

          Ideal is lower pricing, but those are where I see AMD pricing them thanks to the price point if the 5500xt and 5700.

          • @N1NJ4W4RR10R: Yeh I agree … we’ll see but at the moment not enough pressure is being put on nvidia to drop pricing in mid to high market :(

    • Just checked, they kinda do. $100 upgrade on this deal.

  • +2

    Is there any gaming PC with small form factor? Maybe as small as ps4 or xbox?

    • Techfast don’t AFAIK.

      In the context of SFF gaming PCs, are you expecting high end performance? If so be prepared to pay for it and/or build your own SFF.

    • I built myself a small form factor PC using a 5700xt. The motherboard is a bit pricier. I went with the fractal design node 304, not as small as a PS4 but the case looks great and can fit a sapphire pulse without ant issues

  • Can anyone who bought this tell me about the performance? Got any benchmark?

  • Has anyone claim warranty with Techfast before? What was the experience? On Google, someone left a review


    Got a build from them on the cybermonday sales. It was a great price on a GPU and CPU, however the case they come in is really small and looks like trash(don't worry, it has RGB!) They pre-set up Windows for you, so you'll be using a computer that will forever have "TECHFAST AUSTRALIA" as the user.

    If you're looking for a PC that will run games really well and you don't want to wait for Windows to install, this is the PC build for you.

    This is not me however, for me I at least got a good GPU and CPU on sale. Now I need to get a new case, and replace the HDD that got destroyed while I was trying to install it in this tiny case T_T.
  • I know looks are subjective, but I really don't think that is the case I would want my ~$2k computer in.

  • +1

    Careful with the mech, it's a terrible card.

  • Dang, I just two days ago purchased the r7 3800x + 5700 xt T_T

    • you'll need to upgrade the cooler then

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