forum threadsureshkakumani posted May 24, 2026 10:22 PM
Item 1 of 2
Item 1 of 2
forum threadsureshkakumani posted May 24, 2026 10:22 PM
HP Omnidesk ryzen 7 8700g at store only $699
$699
$900
22% offCostco Wholesale
Get Deal at RetailerGood Deal
Bad Deal
Save
Share

Leave a Comment
10 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
1tb ssd bottom 150
199 for cpu case psu board
1tb ssd bottom 150
199 for cpu case psu board
2070 RTX
48GB DDR4.
I am lacking a CPU, MB, and Case/Power supply. Feels expensive to buy these when a bundle can probably replace what I got anyway at a cheap price. but the DDR4 RAM kind limits what I can use since newer chips and board are usually on DDR5 now.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
I think it is a great PC for student and small business for generic use.
FYI: Not much room for upgrade, for it comes with a 280W PSU.
Sounds like a decent deal then. ty. I could use the ram (might be too slow though) and ssd. I have a 2070 card needs a place to stick it
2070 RTX
48GB DDR4.
I am lacking a CPU, MB, and Case/Power supply. Feels expensive to buy these when a bundle can probably replace what I got anyway at a cheap price. but the DDR4 RAM kind limits what I can use since newer chips and board are usually on DDR5 now.
On its own, the 8700G has a great integrated GPU (iGPU) for gaming. But it and the other "G" CPUs are one PCIe revision behind what's normal. In the case of 7000, 8000, and 9000 series, the "G" CPUs have PCIe 4.0 while the non-G CPUs can normally use PCIe 5.0. Basically, similar non-G Ryzen CPUs are better when paired with a discrete GPU (dGPU). But for a family computer where there might be occasional light gaming, the Ryzen "G" CPUs are a great choice.
It looks like your 2070 uses PCIe 3.0, so the 8700G probably wouldn't be a bottleneck. But the 8700G wouldn't be the best choice if you thought you might upgrade the 2070 in a few years. And as mentioned in the beginning, a 280W PSU is most likely too little.
On its own, the 8700G has a great integrated GPU (iGPU) for gaming. But it and the other "G" CPUs are one PCIe revision behind what's normal. In the case of 7000, 8000, and 9000 series, the "G" CPUs have PCIe 4.0 while the non-G CPUs can normally use PCIe 5.0. Basically, similar non-G Ryzen CPUs are better when paired with a discrete GPU (dGPU). But for a family computer where there might be occasional light gaming, the Ryzen "G" CPUs are a great choice.
It looks like your 2070 uses PCIe 3.0, so the 8700G probably wouldn't be a bottleneck. But the 8700G wouldn't be the best choice if you thought you might upgrade the 2070 in a few years. And as mentioned in the beginning, a 280W PSU is most likely too little.
Leave a Comment