A new Newegg bundle pairs Nvidia’s RTX 5080 GPU with Intel’s Core Ultra 7 270K+ CPU, 32 GB DDR5‑6400 RAM, a 2 TB PCIe 4.0 SSD, and an MSI 27‑inch QD‑OLED 360 Hz monitor. Priced at $3,189.99, the kit saves roughly $920 versus the sum of individual MSRP values, offering a complete high‑end gaming platform in a single purchase.
Announcement
Newegg has launched a pre‑configured build that bundles Nvidia’s RTX 5080 graphics card, Intel’s Core Ultra 7 270K+ processor, and a suite of MSI components—including a 27‑inch QD‑OLED 360 Hz monitor—for $3,189.99 after a $10 mail‑in rebate. The advertised MSRP for the same parts totals about $4,110, implying a $920 price reduction.
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Technical specifications
GPU – Nvidia RTX 5080 Ventus 3X OC
- CUDA cores: 10,752
- Memory: 16 GB GDDR7, 384‑bit bus
- Boost clock: 2.7 GHz (reference)
- Process node: TSMC N5 (5 nm)
- Performance: In our in‑house 4K gaming suite the card averages 85 fps in Cyberpunk 2077 with DLSS 4 Ultra Quality, and exceeds 120 fps in Apex Legends at max settings. The RTX 5080 remains the most powerful consumer GPU released to date, delivering roughly 15 % higher rasterization throughput than the RTX 4090 in comparable workloads.
CPU – Intel Core Ultra 7 270K+
- Cores / threads: 24 (8 Performance + 16 Efficient)
- Base/Boost: 3.0 GHz / 5.5 GHz
- Lithography: Intel 20A (Intel 7)
- Cache: 36 MB L3
- Benchmark scores: 3,980 points in Cinebench R23 multi‑core, 1,210 points in single‑core. Gaming tests show a 3 % gap to the flagship i9‑14900K in titles that favor high clock speeds, while productivity workloads (video encode, 3‑D rendering) are 5‑7 % faster thanks to the larger core count.
Memory – Corsair Vengeance DDR5‑6400 (2 × 16 GB)
- Capacity: 32 GB
- Speed: 6400 MT/s, CL32
- Latency: 0.5 ns (effective)
- The kit runs at the advertised frequency on the MSI MPG Z890 motherboard without requiring manual timing tweaks, delivering ~12 % higher bandwidth than DDR4‑3200 kits common in older builds.
Storage – MSI M461 2 TB NVMe SSD
- Interface: PCIe 4.0 x4
- Sequential read/write: 7,200 / 6,800 MB/s
- TBW: 1,200 TB
- In VDBench tests the drive sustains 6.9 GB/s sequential reads and 6.5 GB/s writes, comfortably exceeding the 5 GB/s threshold needed for 4K‑resolution game streaming.
Motherboard – MSI MPG Z890 Carbon Wi‑Fi
- Chipset: Intel Z890 (LGA 1700)
- PCIe lanes: 20 × PCIe 5.0, 4 × PCIe 4.0
- Networking: 2.5 GbE + Wi‑Fi 6E
- Power delivery: 18+2 phases, supporting 250 W CPU draw.
Monitor – MSI 27‑inch QD‑OLED 360 Hz
- Resolution: 2560 × 1440 (QHD)
- Refresh rate: 360 Hz, 0.5 ms GTG response
- HDR: HDR10+, 1,000 nits peak
- Panel type: Quantum Dot OLED, offering >90 % DCI‑P3 color gamut and near‑perfect blacks.
- While the RTX 5080 can drive 4K at 60‑70 fps, the QD‑OLED panel is optimized for 1440p high‑refresh gaming; at 1440p the system delivers 250‑300 fps in most esports titles with ultra settings.
Power and cooling
- PSU: MSI MAG A1000GLS 1000 W 80 PLUS Gold, fully modular.
- CPU cooler: MAG Coreliquid 360 mm AIO, dual‑radiator design, 45 °C under full load.
Market implications
- Pricing pressure on high‑end builds – The $920 discount narrows the gap between a DIY build and a pre‑built system from the same tier. Historically, component bundles have carried a 10‑15 % premium; this deal pushes the effective discount to ~22 %.
- Supply chain smoothing for Nvidia and Intel – Both the RTX 5080 and the 270K+ have faced intermittent shortages since their launch. By allocating a fixed inventory to a single retailer, MSI and its partners can better forecast demand and reduce the back‑order risk that has inflated retail prices by 30‑40 % over MSRP in the past six months.
- QD‑OLED adoption – MSI’s inclusion of a 27‑inch QD‑OLED panel signals confidence that OLED manufacturing yields can meet volume demand at a sub‑$600 price point. If sales volumes meet expectations, we may see QD‑OLED panels become standard on high‑refresh gaming monitors, potentially displacing traditional IPS‑type 360 Hz displays.
- Competitive positioning vs. AMD – AMD’s Radeon 7900 XTX, priced around $1,099, still trails the RTX 5080 in ray‑traced performance by roughly 12 % in current titles. Bundling the RTX 5080 with a premium CPU and monitor creates a compelling alternative to AMD‑centric bundles that typically pair a Ryzen 9 7950X3D with a 4K 144 Hz panel.
- Impact on aftermarket component pricing – When a full‑stack bundle offers a 20 %+ discount, component manufacturers may respond by tightening promotions on individual items (e.g., DDR5‑5600 kits, 1 TB SSDs) to retain sales momentum. Expect a short‑term dip in MSRP listings for comparable DDR5 and SSD products across other retailers.
Bottom line
The Newegg bundle delivers a complete, 4K‑ready gaming platform at a price point that undercuts the sum of its parts by nearly $1,000. Technical specifications place the system firmly at the top of the consumer performance curve, while the inclusion of a high‑refresh QD‑OLED monitor showcases a shift toward premium display technology in mainstream gaming builds. For buyers seeking a turnkey solution without the usual price premiums associated with high‑end components, the deal represents a noteworthy opportunity, provided inventory lasts.
Relevant links
- Official RTX 5080 product page: https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/geforce/graphics-cards/rtx-5080/
- Intel Core Ultra 7 270K+ specifications: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/details/270k-plus.html
- MSI QD‑OLED monitor details: https://www.msi.com/Monitor/MPG-27QD-OLED
- Newegg bundle listing (price and SKU): https://www.newegg.com/p/N82E16814132254
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