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frontpageTealSparrow520 posted Aug 13, 2025 06:41 PM
frontpageTealSparrow520 posted Aug 13, 2025 06:41 PM

iBUYPOWER Element 9 Desktop: Ryzen 7 7800X3D, RTX 5070 Ti, 32GB RAM, 1TB SSD

+ Free Shipping

$1,900

$2,700

29% off
Newegg
13 Comments 10,296 Views
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Deal Details
Newegg has iBUYPOWER Element 9 Desktop (PB-EWA7N57T-01) on sale for $1,899.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member TealSparrow520 for sharing this deal.

Specs:
  • AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D 8-Core Processor
  • AMD B650 Motherboard
  • 360mm AIO Liquid CPU Cooler
  • NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti 16GB Graphics Card
  • 32GB DDR5 5200MHz Memory
  • 1TB Solid State Drive
  • Element 9 White Case + 750W Power Supply
  • Windows 11 Home
  • Gaming Keyboard & Mouse Included

Editor's Notes

Written by SaltyOne | Staff

Original Post

Written by TealSparrow520
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Newegg has iBUYPOWER Element 9 Desktop (PB-EWA7N57T-01) on sale for $1,899.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member TealSparrow520 for sharing this deal.

Specs:
  • AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D 8-Core Processor
  • AMD B650 Motherboard
  • 360mm AIO Liquid CPU Cooler
  • NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti 16GB Graphics Card
  • 32GB DDR5 5200MHz Memory
  • 1TB Solid State Drive
  • Element 9 White Case + 750W Power Supply
  • Windows 11 Home
  • Gaming Keyboard & Mouse Included

Editor's Notes

Written by SaltyOne | Staff

Original Post

Written by TealSparrow520

Community Voting

Deal Score
+13
Good Deal
Get Deal at Newegg

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Top Comments

jeffcee35
169 Posts
26 Reputation
During prime day best buy had this with 9800x3d and 5070ti for 1999.99. I would try to find that price.

12 Comments

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Aug 14, 2025 01:38 AM
169 Posts
Joined Jun 2017
jeffcee35Aug 14, 2025 01:38 AM
169 Posts
During prime day best buy had this with 9800x3d and 5070ti for 1999.99. I would try to find that price.
Aug 15, 2025 12:01 AM
1,890 Posts
Joined Nov 2012
AdyMAug 15, 2025 12:01 AM
1,890 Posts
Quote from jeffcee35 :
During prime day best buy had this with 9800x3d and 5070ti for 1999.99. I would try to find that price.
It is $2000 at BB: https://www.bestbuy.com/site/ibuy...Id=6617830
Aug 15, 2025 02:11 PM
254 Posts
Joined Jul 2022

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Yesterday 08:12 PM
297 Posts
Joined Sep 2018
IndigoSnow3683Yesterday 08:12 PM
297 Posts
Quote from OrangeMagic4534 :
I built a similar PC except with a 9800X3D, 2TB SSD and higher quality parts for the same price. Why don't people just take an afternoon to build their own instead of buying prebuilt junk? It's cheaper and you will be much happier with it.
Not often true. Large companies have economy of scale to sell prebuilt much cheaper. Also, if something goes wrong setting it up...happier? Then there is the warranty.
Pro
Today 07:11 AM
1,563 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
paliknight
Pro
Today 07:11 AM
1,563 Posts
Quote from IndigoSnow3683 :
Not often true. Large companies have economy of scale to sell prebuilt much cheaper. Also, if something goes wrong setting it up...happier? Then there is the warranty.
Yup it can be a major PITA building yourself with so many variables and issues to run into. Warranty will be better though building yourself since parts usually have 2/3/4 year warranties as opposed to 1 year with prebuilts. Maybe parts manufacturers will still honor their multi year warranties on prebuilts but you're dealing with DIY problems now. This still really isn't a slick deal considering most parts are low quality (b650 MB and possibly the PSU) or older gen (CPU, for example). I personally wouldn't recommend this deal to anyone looking for a prebuilt unless they need it now and nothing better is available.
Today 10:18 AM
148 Posts
Joined Aug 2019
Wiredwiz26Today 10:18 AM
148 Posts
Is it easy to setup liquid cooling now than before?
Today 11:33 AM
407 Posts
Joined Nov 2011
SuperdawgToday 11:33 AM
407 Posts
Quote from Wiredwiz26 :
Is it easy to setup liquid cooling now than before?
Presealed units are fairly simple. Some even have fans preinstalled. Otherwise it's put fans on radiator, screw into PC, paste and rear mount bracket(some boards are already installed), same as any cooler, then screw down over CPU.

Custom glass tube pump coolers are generally for seasoned pros.

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Today 11:56 AM
1,062 Posts
Joined Aug 2008
evilmomoToday 11:56 AM
1,062 Posts
Recently lost my rig in a fire. RIP. Thankfully we had renters insurance though - so looking to get a new one spun up.

Any opinions on build vs buy? I built my last one as I was able to re-use the mobo, some RAM, and SSD /NVMe from previous build. Is it still a cost savings to build? Or are most off the shelf machines pretty comparable?
Today 02:54 PM
254 Posts
Joined Jul 2022
OrangeMagic4534Today 02:54 PM
254 Posts
Quote from paliknight :
Yup it can be a major PITA building yourself with so many variables and issues to run into. Warranty will be better though building yourself since parts usually have 2/3/4 year warranties as opposed to 1 year with prebuilts. Maybe parts manufacturers will still honor their multi year warranties on prebuilts but you're dealing with DIY problems now. This still really isn't a slick deal considering most parts are low quality (b650 MB and possibly the PSU) or older gen (CPU, for example). I personally wouldn't recommend this deal to anyone looking for a prebuilt unless they need it now and nothing better is available.
For a 2 thousand dollar investment a person should take the time to learn about the product they are buying. It would be like buying a sports car while knowing absolutely nothing about cars. It's just dumb.
1
Today 05:42 PM
964 Posts
Joined Dec 2008
eurostylinToday 05:42 PM
964 Posts
Quote from OrangeMagic4534 :
For a 2 thousand dollar investment a person should take the time to learn about the product they are buying. It would be like buying a sports car while knowing absolutely nothing about cars. It's just dumb.
You realize that some people value their time more than others. Telling someone to spend 10 hours researching what to buy to build, and then 10 hours of building while watching tutorials, and probably making many mistakes and hours upon hours of assembly, it may not make sense.

You can build this for what, $1600ish? Is it really worth saving $300 for spending 20 hours+ learning all of this info that you will forget the next time you go to buy a replacement?

I certainly value my time WAY more than $15/hr, but some people don't.
Today 06:06 PM
3,711 Posts
Joined Feb 2010
SumDuudToday 06:06 PM
3,711 Posts
Quote from eurostylin :
You realize that some people value their time more than others. Telling someone to spend 10 hours researching what to buy to build, and then 10 hours of building while watching tutorials, and probably making many mistakes and hours upon hours of assembly, it may not make sense.

You can build this for what, $1600ish? Is it really worth saving $300 for spending 20 hours+ learning all of this info that you will forget the next time you go to buy a replacement?

I certainly value my time WAY more than $15/hr, but some people don't.
Add to that if you get a DOA part after hunting and finding the best deal and dealing with RMA and so on. I am a fan of building and think people should try it to learn about how it works but buying a decent prebuilt has its place for sure.
Today 06:26 PM
1,261 Posts
Joined Aug 2004
shadowarachhToday 06:26 PM
1,261 Posts
the same parts minus OS is just under $1700 at Microcenter. the price isn't exactly bad for a pre built with a warranty.

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