Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
popularBeigeRoad455 posted Yesterday 07:19 PM
popularBeigeRoad455 posted Yesterday 07:19 PM

Intel Core Ultra 7 270K Plus (24-Core) Cpu + MSI Z890 MAG Tomahawk WiFi Mobo + Crucial Pro 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5-6400 CL32 Ram; Microcenter In-store $649.99

$650

$980

33% off
Micro Center
18 Comments 2,318 Views
Get Deal at Micro Center
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Microcenter [microcenter.com] has Intel Core Ultra 7 270K Plus, MSI Z890 MAG Tomahawk WiFi LGA 1851, Crucial Pro 32GB DDR5-6400 Kit, Computer Build Bundle on sale for $649.99. Shipping is not available for this bundle. Select free store pickup where available.

Important note: The cpu comes pre-installed on the motherboard in this bundle. The bundle page still lists a 3-yr warranty for both the cpu and motherboard, and lifetime for the ram.

Bundle contents:
  1. Intel Core Ultra 7 270K Plus Arrow Lake Twenty Four-Core (8P + 16E) LGA 1851 Processor - Heatsink Not Included
  2. MSI Z890 MAG Tomahawk WiFi Intel LGA 1851 ATX Motherboard
  3. Crucial Pro 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR5-6400 PC5-51200 CL32 Dual Channel Desktop Memory Kit CP2K16G64C32U5B - Black (1.35v, Timings: 32-40-40-103)
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Microcenter [microcenter.com] has Intel Core Ultra 7 270K Plus, MSI Z890 MAG Tomahawk WiFi LGA 1851, Crucial Pro 32GB DDR5-6400 Kit, Computer Build Bundle on sale for $649.99. Shipping is not available for this bundle. Select free store pickup where available.

Important note: The cpu comes pre-installed on the motherboard in this bundle. The bundle page still lists a 3-yr warranty for both the cpu and motherboard, and lifetime for the ram.

Bundle contents:
  1. Intel Core Ultra 7 270K Plus Arrow Lake Twenty Four-Core (8P + 16E) LGA 1851 Processor - Heatsink Not Included
  2. MSI Z890 MAG Tomahawk WiFi Intel LGA 1851 ATX Motherboard
  3. Crucial Pro 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR5-6400 PC5-51200 CL32 Dual Channel Desktop Memory Kit CP2K16G64C32U5B - Black (1.35v, Timings: 32-40-40-103)

Community Voting

Deal Score
+8
Good Deal
Get Deal at Micro Center

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

18 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Yesterday 07:27 PM
142 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
porksmugglersYesterday 07:27 PM
142 Posts
A solid buy at $600 if you have to have Intel right now, but all the MC bundles are $50-100 high right now. FYI, Nova Lake in 8 months, new socket.
Last edited by porksmugglers March 26, 2026 at 12:56 PM.
2
Yesterday 07:48 PM
9,226 Posts
Joined Jul 2006
NattefrostYesterday 07:48 PM
9,226 Posts
Quote from porksmugglers :
A sold buy at $600 if you have to have Intel right now, but all the MC bundles are $50-100 high right now. FYI, Nova Lake in 8 months, new socket.
Not very nice they jacked up msrp by 50$
1
Original Poster
Pro
Yesterday 08:01 PM
676 Posts
Joined Nov 2021
BeigeRoad455Yesterday 08:01 PM
Original Poster
Pro
676 Posts
This bundle provides a good value for those who need a high end productivity focused computer on a budget, and can't afford to wait another ~8-months for nova lake. That being said, it's overkill for those who don't need extremely strong multithreaded cpu performance, and there are better value options available if you don't use your computer for anything more cpu intensive than gaming.

The Intel Core Ultra 7 270K Plus is part of intels arrow lake refresh lineup, essentially slotting in as a tuned and rebranded core ultra 9 285k at a far cheaper price. It has 24 cores (8p+16e) and 24 threads, trading blows with current mainstream flagship 9950x and 285k cpus in terms of productivity performance (with the right ram) while costing significantly less. It's also quite strong for gaming, slightly beating out amd's current zen5 non-x3d cpus. Power efficiency is also decent for a cpu of this class, and has a noticeable advantage of lower idle power draw compared to current amd cpus. The 270k+ supports intel quicksync (hardware accelerated video encoding/transcoding using the igpu), and enjoys a meaningful advantage over amd cpus in specific workloads that make use of it. The primary negative for the 270k+ is that it's on the dead end lga1851 socket; intels upcoming nova lake cpus will use the lga 1954 socket. Therefore, you'll need to replace your motherboard if you want to upgrade to a better cpu in the future. Amds am5 socket, on the other hand, is guaranteed to at minimum support next gen zen 6 cpus, and is heavily rumored to support 2-gen in the future zen7 cpus as well.
270k+ reviews:
Techpowerup: https://www.techpowerup.com/revie...270k-plus/
Pugetsystems content creation: https://www.pugetsystems.com/labs...on-review/
Gamers nexus: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gWbThC2Oys0
Hardware unboxed: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jQmQEypnHRY

Motherboard specs: https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/M...cification
The MSI Z890 MAG Tomahawk WiFi is a full size atx z890 (current gen high-end chipset) motherboard. It has: a frankly overkill 16(90a)+1+1+1 vrm, three pcie x16 slots (1x gen5 x16, 2x gen4 x4), four m.2 slots (1x gen5, 3x gen4), two thunderbolt 4 ports, and 5G lan, wifi 7 + bt 5.4. Overall it appears to be a solid midrange board, and should be more than sufficient for even fairly strenuous productivity workloads.
Techpowerup review: https://www.techpowerup.com/revie...awk-wi-fi/
As noted previously, this motherboard has a dead end socket, so there almost certainly won't be any meaningful slot in cpu upgrades in the future.

The ram is the biggest disappointment in this combo, though considering the ongoing dram apocalypse (where prices have multiplied 4.5x and supply is heavily limited) that's to be expected. Ddr5 6400 cl32 is fairly decent, however as a crucial ram kit it unfortunately uses micron memory chips (most likely micron h-die if I had to guess). Compared to hynix memory, micron memory has drastically worse overclocking/tuning potential. This doesn't matter much if you would just be sticking with base xmp settings, but is fairly impactful if you are willing to manually tune your memory. That being said, hynix memory is obscenely expensive nowadays, and you'd be extremely hard pressed to find even micron memory like the one in this bundle for under $300.

Overall, if you need a new productivity machine in the short term, particularly for workloads intel still reigns supreme in (I highly recommend referencing the reviews I linked previously to compare cpu performance for your specific workloads), this bundle offers a compelling value. If you can afford to wait 8+ months, nova lake will likely provide a substantial performance uplift, and amd might lower zen5 cpu prices in the meantime to better compete. If you don't need top tier multithreaded performance, you're likely better off getting a cheaper am5 bundle which has a meaningful upgrade path on the am5 socket.
Last edited by BeigeRoad455 March 26, 2026 at 03:33 PM.
Yesterday 08:13 PM
142 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
porksmugglersYesterday 08:13 PM
142 Posts
Quote from Nattefrost :
Not very nice they jacked up msrp by 50$
It's a poor pricing decision, given DIY sales are down 70% currently, and AMD holds near 90% of the segment. Intel needs the capital right now, so I imagine that pricing will not last long.
Yesterday 08:14 PM
162 Posts
Joined Jan 2010
zyzeastYesterday 08:14 PM
162 Posts
MSRP of the CPU is $300, they jacked it up by $50 because it's new. $600 would make more sense for this bundle and would make it a good deal compared to other bundles. $650 is just meh.
Yesterday 08:25 PM
142 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
porksmugglersYesterday 08:25 PM
142 Posts
Quote from zyzeast :
MSRP of the CPU is $300, they jacked it up by $50 because it's new. $600 would make more sense for this bundle and would make it a good deal compared to other bundles. $650 is just meh.
Pricing it $10 less than a 7800X3D, and $40 more than a 9900X practically ensures it will not be picked for gaming or productivity. MC just had to try though.
1
Original Poster
Pro
Yesterday 08:27 PM
676 Posts
Joined Nov 2021
BeigeRoad455Yesterday 08:27 PM
Original Poster
Pro
676 Posts
Quote from porksmugglers :
It's a poor pricing decision, given DIY sales are down 70% currently, and AMD holds near 90% of the segment. Intel needs the capital right now, so I imagine that pricing will not last long.
I agree it's a stupid decision to jack up the cpu msrp by $50. That being said, considering the 270k+ is in a similar performance tier to the r9 9950x and ultra 9 285k, which to my knowledge you'll never find in bundles below ~$850+, even at $650 the value proposition is rather strong if you need a computer right this instant. Of course, as always, if you're willing to wait there may very well be better deals in the future (particularly once the new generations launch). On the other-hand, who knows when the ai bubble will finally pop (with ram prices projected to continue increasing until it does), and the ongoing war in the middle east is further interfering with supply chains (for instance blocking helium exports that are used in chip manufacturing), so it's possible things will get worse before they get better.
Last edited by BeigeRoad455 March 26, 2026 at 01:29 PM.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Pro
Yesterday 08:31 PM
944 Posts
Joined Jan 2007
Orange_Elvis
Pro
Yesterday 08:31 PM
944 Posts
Intel had the best nomenclature I3, I5, I7 and I9. It was extremely straight forward.

The new descriptor are not as good IMO..... Core 5, 7, 9.

Same but different.
Last edited by Orange_Elvis March 26, 2026 at 01:33 PM.
Yesterday 08:33 PM
142 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
porksmugglersYesterday 08:33 PM
142 Posts
Quote from BeigeRoad455 :
I agree it's a stupid decision to jack up the cpu msrp by $50. That being said, considering the 270k+ is in a similar performance tier to the r9 9950x and ultra 9 285k, which to my knowledge you'll never find in bundles below ~$850+, even at $650 the value proposition is rather strong if you need a computer right this instant. Of course, as always, if you're willing to wait there may very well be better deals in the future (particularly once the new generations launch). On the other-hand, who knows when the ai bubble will finally pop (with ram prices projected to continue increasing until it does), and the ongoing war in the middle east is further interfering with supply chains (for instance blocking helium exports that are used in chip manufacturing), so it's possible things will get worse before they get better.
In prod, similar to 9900X, not 9950X, and the 285K is deprecated, so that bundle is not comparable here. It's a buy at $600, as mentioned, and will likely be there shortly. These will not sell in volume, and they need to for Intel's sake. The forecast is still late summer for the bubble, but accelerated by the recent investor panic surrounding OpenAI.
Last edited by porksmugglers March 26, 2026 at 01:36 PM.
1
Original Poster
Pro
Yesterday 08:49 PM
676 Posts
Joined Nov 2021
BeigeRoad455Yesterday 08:49 PM
Original Poster
Pro
676 Posts
Quote from porksmugglers :
In prod, similar to 9900X, not 9950X, and the 285K is deprecated, so that bundle is not comparable here. It's a buy at $600, as mentioned, and will likely be there shortly. These will not sell in volume, and they need to for Intel's sake. The forecast is still late summer for the bubble, but accelerated by the recent investor panic surrounding OpenAI.
What's your source for the 270k+ being closer in productivity performance to the 9900x compared to the 9950x? Both the pugetsystems content creation review and the gamers nexus review (linked in my earlier post in this thread) show the 270k+ is usually far closer to the 9950x(3d) than the 9900x.
Yesterday 09:10 PM
142 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
porksmugglersYesterday 09:10 PM
142 Posts
Quote from BeigeRoad455 :
What's your source for the 270k+ being closer in productivity performance to the 9900x compared to the 9950x? Both the pugetsystems content creation review and the gamers nexus review (linked in my earlier post in this thread) show the 270k+ is usually far closer to the 9950x(3d) than the 9900x.
Those results are both from the Puget Suite, and can be disregarded. Without getting into nearly 40 years of the industry, and being a retired industry analyst, all I'll say is John Bach's name is mud. Might as well be using UserBenchmark results. No idea why Steve still uses it. The 270K Plus is between the 9700X and 9900X in larger prod testing (much, much closer to the 9900X though). MC knows, and that's why they've priced both bundles the same (both will drop).
EDIT: If you want a single canned review instead of taking my word for it, there's plenty out there. TPU tossed theirs up days ago, a healthy gap from the 9950X or 3D. PPP and BOT also allow Intel to tweak for benchmarks, and for Hallock, that's priority number one, and he's not been shy about it.
Last edited by porksmugglers March 26, 2026 at 02:29 PM.
1
Original Poster
Pro
Yesterday 10:31 PM
676 Posts
Joined Nov 2021
BeigeRoad455Yesterday 10:31 PM
Original Poster
Pro
676 Posts
Quote from porksmugglers :
Those results are both from the Puget Suite, and can be disregarded. Without getting into nearly 40 years of the industry, and being a retired industry analyst, all I'll say is John Bach's name is mud. Might as well be using UserBenchmark results. No idea why Steve still uses it. The 270K Plus is between the 9700X and 9900X in larger prod testing (much, much closer to the 9900X though). MC knows, and that's why they've priced both bundles the same (both will drop).
EDIT: If you want a single canned review instead of taking my word for it, there's plenty out there. TPU tossed theirs up days ago, a healthy gap from the 9950X or 3D. PPP and BOT also allow Intel to tweak for benchmarks, and for Hallock, that's priority number one, and he's not been shy about it.
By "TPU" I'm assuming you're referring to the techpowerup review ( https://www.techpowerup.com/revie...270k-plus/ ), I read that one too. While there's all the usual swapping of positions where certain workloads heavily favor intel or amd specifically, the overall theme of the 270k+ being in overall a similar tier to the 9950x remains. I'm honestly not sure where you're getting the impression that the tpu review shows a "healthy gap" from the 270k+ to the 9950x, are you sure you haven't been looking at the 250k+ reviews instead? At the performance summary page of the review (pg 28), the "relative performance" table for applications has the 270k+ with ddr5 6000 cl28 and default power limits at 100% and the 9950x at 101.5%, hardly a "healthy gap". The 9900x isn't included in the tpu review, but the 7950x (zen4 instead of 5, but with 4 more cores), which is known to be generally faster for multithreaded non-avx512 workloads compared to the 9900x, is listed at 93.9% relative performance.

While I certainly understand the concern of intel's optimization tools skewing benchmark results (for instance geekbench is auto-flagging all arrow lake refresh results due to this concern), what actually matters to the end users is how the cpu performs in the real world for common productivity applications.

If you have any actual data showing the 270k+ being on average closer to the 9900x than the 9950x, please provide a link.
Yesterday 11:28 PM
105 Posts
Joined May 2024
lukersmasterYesterday 11:28 PM
105 Posts
This would set you up to make a beast computer.
Yesterday 11:32 PM
213 Posts
Joined Mar 2019
mattysaurusYesterday 11:32 PM
213 Posts
This would be great at $450-500. At $650 I'd rather buy the 7800x3d bundle.
1

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Pro
Yesterday 11:40 PM
10,292 Posts
Joined Dec 2011
Jaggsta
Pro
Yesterday 11:40 PM
10,292 Posts
Quote from zyzeast :
MSRP of the CPU is $300, they jacked it up by $50 because it's new. $600 would make more sense for this bundle and would make it a good deal compared to other bundles. $650 is just meh.
Newegg also $350 just for CPU. Was gonna trade 265K newegg is giving $230 refund and pay $70 difference

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Popular Deals

Trending Deals