Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expiredrutgersftw posted Nov 06, 2023 02:48 PM
expiredrutgersftw posted Nov 06, 2023 02:48 PM

Combo: AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D + MSI B650-P PRO Motherboard + 32GB G.Skill DDR5-6000

+ Free Store Pickup

$500

$668

25% off
Micro Center
105 Comments 59,023 Views
Visit Micro Center
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Micro Center has Computer Build Combo: AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D + MSI B650-P PRO Motherboard + 32GB G.Skill DDR5-6000 on sale for $499.99. Select free store pickup where stock permits.

Thanks to Community Member rutgersftw for sharing this deal.

Note: Availability for store pickup may vary by location.

Bundle includes:
  • AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D Raphael AM5 4.2GHz 8-Core Boxed Processor (Heatsink Not Included)
  • MSI B650-P PRO WiFi AMD AM5 ATX Motherboard
  • G.Skill Flare X5 Series 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5-6000 PC5-48000 CL36 Dual Channel Desktop Memory Kit (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5, Black)

Editor's Notes

Written by jimmytx | Staff
  • About this Store:
    • Eligible for returns within 30 Days of purchase.
  • Additional Information:

Original Post

Written by rutgersftw
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Micro Center has Computer Build Combo: AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D + MSI B650-P PRO Motherboard + 32GB G.Skill DDR5-6000 on sale for $499.99. Select free store pickup where stock permits.

Thanks to Community Member rutgersftw for sharing this deal.

Note: Availability for store pickup may vary by location.

Bundle includes:
  • AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D Raphael AM5 4.2GHz 8-Core Boxed Processor (Heatsink Not Included)
  • MSI B650-P PRO WiFi AMD AM5 ATX Motherboard
  • G.Skill Flare X5 Series 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5-6000 PC5-48000 CL36 Dual Channel Desktop Memory Kit (F5-6000J3636F16GX2-FX5, Black)

Editor's Notes

Written by jimmytx | Staff
  • About this Store:
    • Eligible for returns within 30 Days of purchase.
  • Additional Information:

Original Post

Written by rutgersftw

Community Voting

Deal Score
+78
Good Deal
Visit Micro Center

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Top Comments

BeigeRoad455
620 Posts
1828 Reputation
This bundle doesn't have as large of a discount on the components as most other microcenter bundles, but that makes sense considering the 7800x3d is one of the most desirable and popular cpus currently available. This bundle has the exact same motherboard and ram as the $400 7700x bundle, so you're paying $100 more for the additional gaming performance of the x3d version.

The 7800x3d, and the 7950x3d, are the fastest gaming chips available. While technically the better binned 7950x3d can slightly beat the 7800x3d when the ccd parking functions properly, that chip is far more expensive and aimed at individuals who are doing both gaming and intensive productivity work. Additionally, in any case where the ccd parking isn't properly functional, the 7950x3d trails behind. The 7800x3d is an exceptionally low power and power efficient chip, when compared to the intel 13700k in gaming at 1080p with a rtx4090 the 7800x3d is 11% faster on average while consuming on average 100 fewer watts of power, which is an absolutely insane difference. The difference is even greater when compared to the 14700k, 13900k, and 14900k, which are even less efficient due to intel targeting clock speeds at the extremes of the v/f efficiency curve. The 7800x3d can be easily cooled with any good air cooler, I personally highly recommend the thermalright phantom spirit 120se (PS120SE) at ~$38. If your use case is only gaming, then the 7800x3d is by far the best upper midrange option on the market as it typically goes on sale for ~$350 (the best price ever was a brief microcenter sale at $330). Eight cores is entirely sufficient for current gen gaming, and while it's theoretically possible that games will gradually start being able to take advantage of additional cores over the next 5 years or so, the 7800x3d should remain highly competitive in gaming for years to come. If your use cases are more varied and cpu intensive than just gaming, then the 7800x3d becomes a significantly less compelling option. The 7800x3d has rather mediocre multithreaded performance, it's essentially a marginally slower 7700x when used for productivity. Intel cpus offer far greater multithreaded performance at the same price compared to any single ccd zen 4 cpu, so if productivity is a priority the 7800x3d isn't a good option.

The msi b650-p pro motherboard included in this bundle is acceptable, but it's a lower midrange board with several compromises. Here's a link to the specs page: https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/P...cification
And here's a link to the manual: https://download.msi.com/archive/...-PWIFI.pdf
First off, it entirely lacks pcie gen 5 support, which realistically isn't a big deal currently. However, considering one of the primary benefits of building an am5 system is being able to slot in a new cpu years down the line, 4+ years from now the lack of pcie gen5 might be of much greater concern. Pcie, m.2, and sata configurations should be acceptable for the majority of average users, though once again there's nothing particularly impressive. It has 2 pcie gen4 m.2 slots, though only one comes with a heatsink. The realtek alc897 is a cheap low end audio chip fairly common on low to midrange boards. It also lacks an integrated io shield, but does come with a separate one you can install. The networking is good, with realtek 2.5gb lan and intel wifi6e with bluetooth 5.3. Overall, it's an acceptable lower midrange board that I'd say is worth around $150 considering the prices you can find other comparable boards on sale for.

The ram is probably the biggest disappointment in this bundle. It's ddr5 6000 cl36 36-36-36-96 using samsung b-die memory chips. Zen 4 cpus are rather sensitive to memory timings, the current performance/value sweet spot is ddr5 6000 cl30. While this ram isn't awful, it's still something of a letdown, and will likely cost you a couple percentage points of performance. Samsung memory chips are inferior to hynix memory chips in just about every way, having worse compatibility, reliability, timings, and worse overclocking/tuning potential. If you are willing to manually tune your ram then the performance delta will actually be meaningful compared to manually tuned hynix ram. Ram using samsung memory chips have had compatibility issues with the am5 platform in the past, the latest agesa updates have supposedly fixed those compatibility issues. I highly recommend flashing the latest non-beta bios 7D78v17 which has agesa 1.0.0.7c before installing the cpu and ram. Instructions for flashing the bios without installing the cpu or ram can be found on page 54 of the manual.

Overall, this is a decent deal for a 7800x3d system, though it's not nearly as massive of a discount compared to the other bundles microcenter has listed. The cpu is worth around $350, the motherboard around $150, and the ram around $80 (you can find 32gb 2x16 ddr5 6000 cl30 for $90), so you save around $80 total compared to buying the components separately on acceptable sales. If you compare to the best sales we've seen it's more like a $50 savings. If you're only gaming, play at 1440p or below, and have a high enough end gpu that cpu bottlenecks are an issue, then this is your best option. If you wouldn't actually benefit from the additional gaming performance of this cpu the 7700x bundle is essentially the exact same for $100 cheaper. If you require high multithreaded performance for productivity, instead of only gaming, your best bet is to wait for the 13700k bundle to drop back down to $450, or preferably for the 7900x bundle to drop back down to $550. If you don't urgently need a new system now I'd wait a couple of months to see if this bundle ever drops in price, since microcenter bundles tend to occasionally go on sale for around $50 cheaper.
Techngro
1627 Posts
372 Reputation
Dude. If you don't live near a Microcenter, just buy a new house closer to one.

It's not rocket science, people...
SRVisGod24
1199 Posts
113 Reputation
Unless you don't care about upgrading your mobo in a few years, the 7800X3D is the better deal since the 14700K is the end of the line for the current Intel socket. With the 7800X3D, you'll have at least one or two more upgrades, thus you'll be able to just drop in a new CPU.

I will say that the 14700K has a better mobo. PCIE 5.0 won't be important to a lot of people. But if it is, then the Intel deal is a damn good one!

104 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Nov 07, 2023 04:43 AM
989 Posts
Joined Dec 2017
InstanceNoodleNov 07, 2023 04:43 AM
989 Posts
Quote from koolaid2000 :
That's not really the entire picture and you're unfairly pointing out fanboyism while the fanboy inside you is also rearing its head. Sure the 14700k is better for productivity but that's mostly in multithread/multicore applications, which the average user will never take advantage of. Most of us are gamers with light use/browsing in between, so the AMD x3d chips make perfect sense, as you are maximizing that performance. What good is 87% increase in productivity with multicore applications if you don't use it and at the cost of tremendously higher power consumption and heavy cooling aparratus? The benchmarks I have looked at for single core performance show the higher clocked AMD chips often winning.
Winter is coming. I don't have to buy an extra heater for my room.

But all kidding a side. If you are going with a gpu and wanted gaming, go for the 7800x3d. Some programs love intel chips like video editing and video ai. You might save a lot of time, but those are night running during sleep wait time.

I hope that plex gets to work on ryzen for Av1 transcoding soon. I am pointing everyone else to intel for the server.
Nov 07, 2023 04:51 AM
15 Posts
Joined Jun 2023
CoolCircle4487Nov 07, 2023 04:51 AM
15 Posts
Quote from koolaid2000 :
That's not really the entire picture and you're unfairly pointing out fanboyism while the fanboy inside you is also rearing its head. Sure the 14700k is better for productivity but that's mostly in multithread/multicore applications, which the average user will never take advantage of. Most of us are gamers with light use/browsing in between, so the AMD x3d chips make perfect sense, as you are maximizing that performance. What good is 87% increase in productivity with multicore applications if you don't use it and at the cost of tremendously higher power consumption and heavy cooling aparratus? The benchmarks I have looked at for single core performance show the higher clocked AMD chips often winning.


Agreed with this so much. If you truly care about multi-core performance, than you would be getting a 7950X3D. If youre making a 4090 gaming or workstation build, doesnt matter. For everyone else...

Caveat, if your bread and butter game/or app is better on Intel or AMD, choose accordingly...

Otherwise, 7950X3D and 13900k are kinda tied for performance, only difference is Intel uses on average 60% more power to get it done.(Not talking about gaming benchmarks(not that it matters), talking about long compiles,...) The implications for CPU cooler cost and noise, the minimum motherboard quality(VRM,...), raw electricity savings(over expected lifetime) and your AC bill during summer are all big. Today, you dont get Intel unless you have to.

As for the 7800X3D, while it seems more expensive, is an absolute power sipper. Im cooling my 7950X3D with the $40 Thermalright Phantom Spirit, forget thermal throttle, it never touched 80 during long stability torture test. During normal use it is whisper silent.
- You dont need a $100+ AIO water cooler for X3D. (unlike Intel, you could go overkill and get super all time quiet run).
- You dont need $200+ motherboard with outstanding VRMs to keep the CPU fed. Im running my 7950X3D on a ASRock 620i mini-itx board(just a good board, 8+2+1 VRM w/60 Caps, nothing special).
- all the heat/noise and electricity savings is a lot over the years.
- it is a single die chip with brute force of extra cache. The operating system and programs, now and in future do not need special knowledge to take advantage of it.

I recommend compile page [phoronix.com] and summary page [phoronix.com] of Phoronix's 7800X3D review. Or compile page [phoronix.com] and summary page [phoronix.com] of 14900k. The trends are so consistent.
Last edited by CoolCircle4487 November 6, 2023 at 09:03 PM.
5
Nov 07, 2023 04:53 AM
90 Posts
Joined Dec 2009
kamanesmNov 07, 2023 04:53 AM
90 Posts
Quote from koolaid2000 :
That's not really the entire picture and you're unfairly pointing out fanboyism while the fanboy inside you is also rearing its head. Sure the 14700k is better for productivity but that's mostly in multithread/multicore applications, which the average user will never take advantage of. Most of us are gamers with light use/browsing in between, so the AMD x3d chips make perfect sense, as you are maximizing that performance. What good is 87% increase in productivity with multicore applications if you don't use it and at the cost of tremendously higher power consumption and heavy cooling aparratus? The benchmarks I have looked at for single core performance show the higher clocked AMD chips often winning.
I don't think most are gamers though, and to be fair 7800x3d is not really for overclocking and 14700k performs better, multi- or single-core, outside of gaming.

Overall I think 7800x3d wins for more people than 14700k still. Use case should be the primary factor in my opinion. OP said use is mixed, but unless it means CPU intensive productivity work like compiling code everyday, there'll be no perceivable difference. But in gaming 7800x3d does make a noticeable difference, plus you save power. Secondary factors include Intel's better RAM stability, AMD's recent BIOS issues, and AM5 platform longevity but they all seem to be compromisable.
Nov 07, 2023 05:07 AM
36 Posts
Joined Sep 2023
EagerRaccoon634Nov 07, 2023 05:07 AM
36 Posts
Quote from kamanesm :
I don't think most are gamers though, and to be fair 7800x3d is not really for overclocking and 14700k performs better, multi- or single-core, outside of gaming.

Overall I think 7800x3d wins for more people than 14700k still. Use case should be the primary factor in my opinion. OP said use is mixed, but unless it means CPU intensive productivity work like compiling code everyday, there'll be no perceivable difference. But in gaming 7800x3d does make a noticeable difference, plus you save power. Secondary factors include Intel's better RAM stability, AMD's recent BIOS issues, and AM5 platform longevity but they all seem to be compromisable.
More people are gamers than are Autocad engineers or Pixar animation artists. The people that would benefit from a 14700k over a 7800X3D or even a 7950X3D are a very small minority. If you custom build computers to run multicore apps and benchmarks all day then sure, there's an argument for the 14700k. My point is the average user benefits more from the higher clock and gaming performance with AMD than from extra cores with intel.
1
Nov 07, 2023 05:21 AM
7,664 Posts
Joined Jan 2009
make_moneysNov 07, 2023 05:21 AM
7,664 Posts
Quote from kamanesm :
I don't think most are gamers though, and to be fair 7800x3d is not really for overclocking and 14700k performs better, multi- or single-core, outside of gaming.

Overall I think 7800x3d wins for more people than 14700k still. Use case should be the primary factor in my opinion. OP said use is mixed, but unless it means CPU intensive productivity work like compiling code everyday, there'll be no perceivable difference. But in gaming 7800x3d does make a noticeable difference, plus you save power. Secondary factors include Intel's better RAM stability, AMD's recent BIOS issues, and AM5 platform longevity but they all seem to be compromisable.
14th gen from intel is a farking joke ...a bad one too. Its crazy that its even brought up , obsolete, inneficient, and expensive. it makes no sense for the average user/gamer and thats really all there is to it. If you want intel wait until next year and save cash until then cause youre gonna need it , otherwise this 7800x3d will last u a long time and the platform will be supported for longer than even intel's next gen socket.
Nov 07, 2023 05:32 AM
7,664 Posts
Joined Jan 2009
make_moneysNov 07, 2023 05:32 AM
7,664 Posts
Quote from essix8 :

Personally I think the 14700k is the far better deal.
Not for the individual that you're replying to thats for sure. They are clearly building a gaming setup.
Pro
Nov 07, 2023 07:24 AM
9,622 Posts
Joined Oct 2008
Danzilla
Pro
Nov 07, 2023 07:24 AM
9,622 Posts
Seems a bit ... meh. Either save $100 and go with the 7700x combo (is the 7800x3d really worth $100 more than the 7700x??), or spend $100 more and hit that 7900x with more ram and 650E motherboard.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Original Poster
Nov 07, 2023 01:02 PM
494 Posts
Joined Jul 2011
rutgersftw
Original Poster
Nov 07, 2023 01:02 PM
494 Posts
Quote from Danzilla :
Seems a bit ... meh. Either save $100 and go with the 7700x combo (is the 7800x3d really worth $100 more than the 7700x??), or spend $100 more and hit that 7900x with more ram and 650E motherboard.
The 7700X bundle is definitely a better value overall and, in most scenarios, offers very similar performance.

However, X3D are enthusiast-focused CPUs, and enthusiast gear very rarely goes on sale. From that perspective, this is probably as good a deal as we will likely see this holiday season for this specific CPU. If the X3D's mix of FPS dominance and ultra high efficiency appeals to you, here it is. If not - the 7700X is at worst 85% of the performance in game and 100-120% the performance in productivity.
Nov 07, 2023 02:16 PM
168 Posts
Joined Dec 2011
swingking03Nov 07, 2023 02:16 PM
168 Posts
Which of these would be better for video editing and streaming plex from? I don't play many games.
Nov 07, 2023 02:21 PM
4 Posts
Joined Dec 2021
BeigePen249Nov 07, 2023 02:21 PM
4 Posts
Quote from Tutsxan :
This or the 14700k deal for $50 more? Which MB and RAM is better?

For comparison:

https://www.microcenter.com/produ...ild-bundle

https://www.microcenter.com/produ...ild-bundle

I'll be updating my system from a 9700k 1660super. Both had treated me very well for the past 6 years or so. The plan is to get a 4070/4070ti (unless super options came out). New PSU as well (850W probably).

Monitor is Alienware 2721D (1440p) at as much refresh I can get (max 240hz). Use is mixed.

Tia.
No reason to spend more on 14700K. Just get the 13700K bundle.
Nov 07, 2023 03:33 PM
1,139 Posts
Joined Feb 2004
IlovedealsNov 07, 2023 03:33 PM
1,139 Posts
Quote from swingking03 :
Which of these would be better for video editing and streaming plex from? I don't play many games.
7900x bundle
Nov 07, 2023 03:36 PM
668 Posts
Joined Nov 2015
IntranetusaNov 07, 2023 03:36 PM
668 Posts
Quote from Tutsxan :
This or the 14700k deal for $50 more? Which MB and RAM is better?

For comparison:

https://www.microcenter.com/produ...ild-bundle

https://www.microcenter.com/produ...ild-bundle

I'll be updating my system from a 9700k 1660super. Both had treated me very well for the past 6 years or so. The plan is to get a 4070/4070ti (unless super options came out). New PSU as well (850W probably).

Monitor is Alienware 2721D (1440p) at as much refresh I can get (max 240hz). Use is mixed.

Tia.
Get the 7800X3D.

The 7800X3D is better for gaming and power efficency. The 14700k is better for productivity as it has more cores.

The 14700k is basically a space heater and uses like 1.5x (50% more) to 2x (100% more) electricity compared to the 7800x3d.

https://www.techpowerup.com/revie...0k/23.html

That much higher electric draw also means more heat and more noise (higher cooling fan speeds).
Pro
Nov 07, 2023 06:56 PM
620 Posts
Joined Nov 2021
BeigeRoad455
Pro
Nov 07, 2023 06:56 PM
620 Posts
Quote from TalentedCreature147 :
What would you replace the motherboard with if they are willing to sub it out?
Microcenter typically doesn't allow swapping any components in their bundles, the margins on the bundles are already razor thin and it's only possible to offer those prices because the manufacturers partially subsidize those exact products being sold in the bundle. That's the same reason why any returns of components in a bundle require returning the whole bundle, though the manager can waive that requirement at their discretion. Likewise, while it's possible that a manager may be willing to allow you to swap for a different motherboard, I wouldn't count on it.
Moving on to actual motherboard recommendations, that really depends on your needs and the current prices. Unless you actually need a massive amount of pcie connectivity, which would be unusual for an individual purchasing a 7800x3d, a x670 motherboard is probably a waste of money. B650 vs b650e(extreme) is a more interesting debate. The primary difference is that b650e supports pcie gen 5 x16 while b650 only supports pcie gen 4 (a pcie gen5 m.2 slot is optional using the b650 chipset, however boards with that configuration typically have compromises). Pcie gen5 support is not very useful at this moment, so if you plan to upgrade within 5 years, and plan on replacing the motherboard with your next upgrade, then there's not much point in paying extra for a b650e board. If you plan on potentially slotting in a new cpu years down the line, then you will likely be on this board for at least 5 years and pcie gen5 support will likely actually be a meaningful addition. Likewise, if you plan on slotting in a new cpu in the future, I'd recommend getting a board with moderately overkill vrms so that it can handle future generations of cpus if they happen to be more power hungry (the key word being moderate, there's no need to go crazy). It should also be noted that, at least in my experience, microcenter typically doesn't have fantastic prices on (new) am5 motherboards outside of the bundles and you'll usually find better deals on amazon or newegg. I'd check other retailers as well instead of just blindly assuming that microcenter offers the best deals on motherboards like they do for many other products. Hardware unboxed has an excellent video reviewing 35 b650 and b650e boards, it should provide you with a good basis for choosing a board. Keep in mind that prices have shifted in the past several months, so do your research. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZtHOOyWYiic
Last edited by BeigeRoad455 November 8, 2023 at 01:08 PM.
Nov 07, 2023 08:45 PM
884 Posts
Joined Dec 2018
BrianD1175Nov 07, 2023 08:45 PM
884 Posts
Quote from BeigeRoad455 :
This bundle doesn't have as large of a discount on the components as most other microcenter bundles, but that makes sense considering the 7800x3d is one of the most desirable and popular cpus currently available. This bundle has the exact same motherboard and ram as the $400 7700x bundle, so you're paying $100 more for the additional gaming performance of the x3d version.

The 7800x3d, and the 7950x3d, are the fastest gaming chips available. While technically the better binned 7950x3d can slightly beat the 7800x3d when the ccd parking functions properly, that chip is far more expensive and aimed at individuals who are doing both gaming and intensive productivity work. Additionally, in any case where the ccd parking isn't properly functional, the 7950x3d trails behind. The 7800x3d is an exceptionally low power and power efficient chip, when compared to the intel 13700k in gaming at 1080p with a rtx4090 the 7800x3d is 11% faster on average while consuming on average 100 fewer watts of power, which is an absolutely insane difference. The difference is even greater when compared to the 14700k, 13900k, and 14900k, which are even less efficient due to intel targeting clock speeds at the extremes of the v/f efficiency curve. The 7800x3d can be easily cooled with any good air cooler, I personally highly recommend the thermalright phantom spirit 120se (PS120SE) at ~$38. If your use case is only gaming, then the 7800x3d is by far the best upper midrange option on the market as it typically goes on sale for ~$350 (the best price ever was a brief microcenter sale at $330). Eight cores is entirely sufficient for current gen gaming, and while it's theoretically possible that games will gradually start being able to take advantage of additional cores over the next 5 years or so, the 7800x3d should remain highly competitive in gaming for years to come. If your use cases are more varied and cpu intensive than just gaming, then the 7800x3d becomes a significantly less compelling option. The 7800x3d has rather mediocre multithreaded performance, it's essentially a marginally slower 7700x when used for productivity. Intel cpus offer far greater multithreaded performance at the same price compared to any single ccd zen 4 cpu, so if productivity is a priority the 7800x3d isn't a good option.

The msi b650-p pro motherboard included in this bundle is acceptable, but it's a lower midrange board with several compromises. Here's a link to the specs page: https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/P...cification
And here's a link to the manual: https://download.msi.com/archive/...-PWIFI.pdf
First off, it entirely lacks pcie gen 5 support, which realistically isn't a big deal currently. However, considering one of the primary benefits of building an am5 system is being able to slot in a new cpu years down the line, 4+ years from now the lack of pcie gen5 might be of much greater concern. Pcie, m.2, and sata configurations should be acceptable for the majority of average users, though once again there's nothing particularly impressive. It has 2 pcie gen4 m.2 slots, though only one comes with a heatsink. The realtek alc897 is a cheap low end audio chip fairly common on low to midrange boards. It also lacks an integrated io shield, but does come with a separate one you can install. The networking is good, with realtek 2.5gb lan and intel wifi6e with bluetooth 5.3. Overall, it's an acceptable lower midrange board that I'd say is worth around $150 considering the prices you can find other comparable boards on sale for.

The ram is probably the biggest disappointment in this bundle. It's ddr5 6000 cl36 36-36-36-96 using samsung b-die memory chips. Zen 4 cpus are rather sensitive to memory timings, the current performance/value sweet spot is ddr5 6000 cl30. While this ram isn't awful, it's still something of a letdown, and will likely cost you a couple percentage points of performance. Samsung memory chips are inferior to hynix memory chips in just about every way, having worse compatibility, reliability, timings, and worse overclocking/tuning potential. If you are willing to manually tune your ram then the performance delta will actually be meaningful compared to manually tuned hynix ram. Ram using samsung memory chips have had compatibility issues with the am5 platform in the past, the latest agesa updates have supposedly fixed those compatibility issues. I highly recommend flashing the latest non-beta bios 7D78v17 which has agesa 1.0.0.7c before installing the cpu and ram. Instructions for flashing the bios without installing the cpu or ram can be found on page 54 of the manual.

Overall, this is a decent deal for a 7800x3d system, though it's not nearly as massive of a discount compared to the other bundles microcenter has listed. The cpu is worth around $350, the motherboard around $150, and the ram around $80 (you can find 32gb 2x16 ddr5 6000 cl30 for $90), so you save around $80 total compared to buying the components separately on acceptable sales. If you compare to the best sales we've seen it's more like a $50 savings. If you're only gaming, play at 1440p or below, and have a high enough end gpu that cpu bottlenecks are an issue, then this is your best option. If you wouldn't actually benefit from the additional gaming performance of this cpu the 7700x bundle is essentially the exact same for $100 cheaper. If you require high multithreaded performance for productivity, instead of only gaming, your best bet is to wait for the 13700k bundle to drop back down to $450, or preferably for the 7900x bundle to drop back down to $550. If you don't urgently need a new system now I'd wait a couple of months to see if this bundle ever drops in price, since microcenter bundles tend to occasionally go on sale for around $50 cheaper.
Undoubtedly one of the highest quality posts here on SD that I've ever read. I'm not even particularly in the market for building a new desktop but couldn't help but appreciate the post.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Nov 07, 2023 09:13 PM
640 Posts
Joined Nov 2020
ElatedSpaniel543Nov 07, 2023 09:13 PM
640 Posts
Quote from CoolCircle4487 :
Agreed with this so much. If you truly care about multi-core performance, than you would be getting a 7950X3D. If youre making a 4090 gaming or workstation build, doesnt matter. For everyone else...

Caveat, if your bread and butter game/or app is better on Intel or AMD, choose accordingly...

Otherwise, 7950X3D and 13900k are kinda tied for performance, only difference is Intel uses on average 60% more power to get it done.(Not talking about gaming benchmarks(not that it matters), talking about long compiles,...) The implications for CPU cooler cost and noise, the minimum motherboard quality(VRM,...), raw electricity savings(over expected lifetime) and your AC bill during summer are all big. Today, you dont get Intel unless you have to.

As for the 7800X3D, while it seems more expensive, is an absolute power sipper. Im cooling my 7950X3D with the $40 Thermalright Phantom Spirit, forget thermal throttle, it never touched 80 during long stability torture test. During normal use it is whisper silent.
- You dont need a $100+ AIO water cooler for X3D. (unlike Intel, you could go overkill and get super all time quiet run).
- You dont need $200+ motherboard with outstanding VRMs to keep the CPU fed. Im running my 7950X3D on a ASRock 620i mini-itx board(just a good board, 8+2+1 VRM w/60 Caps, nothing special).
- all the heat/noise and electricity savings is a lot over the years.
- it is a single die chip with brute force of extra cache. The operating system and programs, now and in future do not need special knowledge to take advantage of it.

I recommend compile page [phoronix.com] and summary page [phoronix.com] of Phoronix's 7800X3D review. Or compile page [phoronix.com] and summary page [phoronix.com] of 14900k. The trends are so consistent.
I can't believe it was any kind of toture (aka synthetic) test and you kept it to 80c without water cooling. My 7900X (cooled by a Noctua DH-15) hit 95 with cinebench pretty quickly. It's happily below 75 for the rest of the time, including gaming and often much lower.

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Popular Deals

View All

Trending Deals

View All