No keyboard or mouse included. But yea it does save you 12.00 dollars.
And spending a little more on top of that will give you better option. And you probably didn't notice that you can grab the NZXT Function MiniTKL - Compact Tenkeyless RGB Mechanical Gaming Keyboard w/ Gateron Red Switches, Aluminum Top Plate, Sound Dampening Foam, a premium mechanical keyboard, by just paying $5, instead of that $12 for the default ones.
Just curious what folks experience with this company are? Reading all the reviews it sounds like if you get a good system, youre good to go. However, if you run into any issues, the customer service is pretty bad.
Just curious what folks experience with this company are? Reading all the reviews it sounds like if you get a good system, youre good to go. However, if you run into any issues, the customer service is pretty bad.
I recommend looking into gamersnexus' reviews of this brand on youtube 👍
I recommend looking into gamersnexus' reviews of this brand on youtube
If your request for a refund is after 30 days but before 45 days of the invoice date, your refund will be subject to a restocking fee of up to 15% of the purchase price paid, plus any applicable sales tax.
Just curious what folks experience with this company are? Reading all the reviews it sounds like if you get a good system, youre good to go. However, if you run into any issues, the customer service is pretty bad.
Customer service was a pain but I bought mine from Amazon. Bluetooth receiver came broken, whole first comp crapped out in under a month. Sent me a replacement and it's still going, but just had to replace motherboard.
And spending a little more on top of that will give you better option. And you probably didn't notice that you can grab the NZXT Function MiniTKL - Compact Tenkeyless RGB Mechanical Gaming Keyboard w/ Gateron Red Switches, Aluminum Top Plate, Sound Dampening Foam, a premium mechanical keyboard, by just paying $5, instead of that $12 for the default ones.
Just curious what folks experience with this company are? Reading all the reviews it sounds like if you get a good system, youre good to go. However, if you run into any issues, the customer service is pretty bad.
I bought a PC from them over a decade ago, so I don't know if it got better, but after a year a PCI slot gave out on my mobo and even though I was still under their warranty, they couldn't replace it because they did not stock it anymore and wouldn't give me anything comparable. They are lazy about repairs. Maybe they got better since.
Just curious what folks experience with this company are? Reading all the reviews it sounds like if you get a good system, youre good to go. However, if you run into any issues, the customer service is pretty bad.
I've got 2. Both good. But ya there are other stories out there where the shipping back policy bothered people. Problems do and can happen with all companies even ones you pay 50% more for.
I will say though out of the box it performed well and a little undervolting later it performed at the top of its class in terms of benchmarking. Knock on wood.
Just curious what folks experience with this company are? Reading all the reviews it sounds like if you get a good system, youre good to go. However, if you run into any issues, the customer service is pretty bad.
I bought a return unit from one of those stores that sells Amazon returns so I got it for like $300 out the door. I've not had any issues whatsoever with it, aside from the fairly mediocre specs of the unit I bought. I've upgraded the psu, ssd, ram, and gpu over the past 8 years and it's still running strong. I've heard horror stories online of people who buy direct from this company, but I'd never pay retail for anything so I can't speak to that. I've been pretty happy with mine, personally speaking.
Had to get a new CyberPower PC for my bro during the work-from-home pandemic-era shortage in June 2020. No issues in 3 years, and I've upgraded it 3 times. No experience with liquid cooling or their tech support, but if you have any issue with any pre-built brand, you might as well do the tech support yourself and get a cheap refurb part to fix it. 🤣
This is an excellent price. I honestly think people are underestimating how good this ongoing Cyberpower PC sale is.
I'm currently buying parts to build a system and honestly I'm not able to match this pre-built's price despite building myself (and that's after the fact that I'm getting the $500 micro center 7800x3d bundle). In the previous Cyberpower PC thread some folks said that you could build (that system) yourself for about $200 cheaper, but I'm not seeing even that margin in the deals that were posted. Spec one up yourself and chances are your system will be more expensive
I've seen that in many pre-built PC deal threads, folks often claim that they can build that config themselves for cheaper. But I've often suspected that they assume the cheapest of the prices for all the parts. But practically it's rare that you will be able to get a deal on all the parts at the same time. At any given time you'll probably get a deal on one part. Most often that deal will trigger you to build, and you'll be buying pretty much everything else at regular retail.
Side note - Props to OP for kitting up good deal builds. I've seen his many pre-built deal posts over the years, and he does seem to have an excellent eye for what constitutes a deal in the ever-shifting PC building landscape.
This is an excellent price. I honestly think people are underestimating how good this ongoing Cyberpower PC sale is.
I'm currently buying parts to build a system and honestly I'm not able to match this pre-built's price despite building myself (and that's after the fact that I'm getting the $500 micro center 7800x3d bundle). In the previous Cyberpower PC thread some folks said that you could build (that system) yourself for about $200 cheaper, but I'm not even seeing that margin in the deals that were posted. Spec one up yourself and chances are your system will be more expensive
I've seen that in many pre-built PC deal threads, folks often claim that they can build that config themselves for cheaper. But I've often suspected that they assume the cheapest of the prices for all the parts. But practically it's rare that you will be able to get a deal on all the parts at the same time. At any given time you'll probably get a deal on one part. Most often that deal will trigger you to build, and you'll be buying pretty much everything else at regular retail.
Side note - Props to OP for kitting up good deal builds. I've seen his many pre-built deal posts over the years, and he does seem to have an excellent eye for what constitutes a deal in the ever-shifting PC building landscape.
I also got the micro center deal. Got it yesterday. Ended up paying $2200 for a PC (with $250 installation since I just couldn't trust myself) and honestly a lot was just for aesthetics like getting the nzxt kraken aio which came out to like $280 but Idk first pc build and I wanted something that looked good so didn't mind paying extra. Also felt I got lucky since they had an open box gigabyte 4070 aero for like 570$ that looked like it was returned new and was never put in a motherboard. I'm excited all things considered but yeah I wanted to go the pre-built route but a lot of these PCs (at least to me) don't look good so I didn't mind paying a little premium
Edit: I also couldn't justify paying $300 more for a 4070ti that only gives you a handful of frames more
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I recommend looking into gamersnexus' reviews of this brand on youtube 👍
https://support.cyberpo
Customer service was a pain but I bought mine from Amazon. Bluetooth receiver came broken, whole first comp crapped out in under a month. Sent me a replacement and it's still going, but just had to replace motherboard.
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I will say though out of the box it performed well and a little undervolting later it performed at the top of its class in terms of benchmarking. Knock on wood.
I bought a return unit from one of those stores that sells Amazon returns so I got it for like $300 out the door. I've not had any issues whatsoever with it, aside from the fairly mediocre specs of the unit I bought. I've upgraded the psu, ssd, ram, and gpu over the past 8 years and it's still running strong. I've heard horror stories online of people who buy direct from this company, but I'd never pay retail for anything so I can't speak to that. I've been pretty happy with mine, personally speaking.
I'm currently buying parts to build a system and honestly I'm not able to match this pre-built's price despite building myself (and that's after the fact that I'm getting the $500 micro center 7800x3d bundle). In the previous Cyberpower PC thread some folks said that you could build (that system) yourself for about $200 cheaper, but I'm not seeing even that margin in the deals that were posted. Spec one up yourself and chances are your system will be more expensive
I've seen that in many pre-built PC deal threads, folks often claim that they can build that config themselves for cheaper. But I've often suspected that they assume the cheapest of the prices for all the parts. But practically it's rare that you will be able to get a deal on all the parts at the same time. At any given time you'll probably get a deal on one part. Most often that deal will trigger you to build, and you'll be buying pretty much everything else at regular retail.
Side note - Props to OP for kitting up good deal builds. I've seen his many pre-built deal posts over the years, and he does seem to have an excellent eye for what constitutes a deal in the ever-shifting PC building landscape.
I'm currently buying parts to build a system and honestly I'm not able to match this pre-built's price despite building myself (and that's after the fact that I'm getting the $500 micro center 7800x3d bundle). In the previous Cyberpower PC thread some folks said that you could build (that system) yourself for about $200 cheaper, but I'm not even seeing that margin in the deals that were posted. Spec one up yourself and chances are your system will be more expensive
I've seen that in many pre-built PC deal threads, folks often claim that they can build that config themselves for cheaper. But I've often suspected that they assume the cheapest of the prices for all the parts. But practically it's rare that you will be able to get a deal on all the parts at the same time. At any given time you'll probably get a deal on one part. Most often that deal will trigger you to build, and you'll be buying pretty much everything else at regular retail.
Side note - Props to OP for kitting up good deal builds. I've seen his many pre-built deal posts over the years, and he does seem to have an excellent eye for what constitutes a deal in the ever-shifting PC building landscape.
I also got the micro center deal. Got it yesterday. Ended up paying $2200 for a PC (with $250 installation since I just couldn't trust myself) and honestly a lot was just for aesthetics like getting the nzxt kraken aio which came out to like $280 but Idk first pc build and I wanted something that looked good so didn't mind paying extra. Also felt I got lucky since they had an open box gigabyte 4070 aero for like 570$ that looked like it was returned new and was never put in a motherboard. I'm excited all things considered but yeah I wanted to go the pre-built route but a lot of these PCs (at least to me) don't look good so I didn't mind paying a little premium
Edit: I also couldn't justify paying $300 more for a 4070ti that only gives you a handful of frames more