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Intel i9-10900K 10-Core Gaming PC, 2070 Super $2849.99 (Was $3100) Delivered @ CGB Solutions

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This deal is available for 7 days only!

The biggest and the best has arrived. Team up with Intel's latest 10th Gen i9 10900K rocking 10-Cores, 20 threads and a whopping max turbo frequency of 5.3GHz. Paired with the ASRock Z470 motherboard, ADATA D60G 3600, 8GB 2070 Super and 360mm NZXT Kraken CPU Cooler.

Base Specifications

  • Processor: Intel i9-10900K - Guaranteed

  • CPU Cooler: NZXT Kraken X73 360mm AIO - Guaranteed

  • Motherboard: ASRock Z490 Extreme 4 or Steel Legend - Guaranteed

  • RAM: ADATA D60G 2x8GB 3600MHz RGB DDR4 - Guaranteed

  • Graphics Card: Galax 2070 Super

  • Storage: Samsung 256GB NVMe M.2 - Guaranteed

  • Case: Gamdias Athena M2 - Guaranteed

  • Power Supply: EVGA 700W Gold 80+ - Guaranteed

  • OS: W10 Unactivated

  • 2 Year Warranty

Available Upgrades

  • ADATA D60G 3600MHz 32GB DDR4

  • Samsung 1TB NVMe

  • WD Black 2TB

  • Windows 10 Pro - Original Activation Key Included

  • Galax 2080 Super

For custom requests to this model feel free to email us at [email protected] or DM us on OzBargain

Stay Safe
OP

Related Stores

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closed Comments

  • +24

    Can I play minesweeper with this?

    • +7

      Tough crowd

    • +1

      you can even play RTX mimesweeper if they release it! imagine that!

      • +1

        The raytracing on mines is phenomenal.

    • Medium settings with 1440p and 60hz.
      For higher 144hz, 1440p and high settings, you.ight need 2080 upgrade.

      • Just turn on DLSS it'll be Aight hehe

    • Only with msPaint.exe cascaded.

    • -4

      CPU has one integrated, right?

        • +2

          Lol fk u r a hater haha

    • +9

      This is a valid question, OP did not mention guaranteed like the other items in the list.

      • -8

        Warranty NOT guaranteed.

      • +4

        Haha I'd presume the model, so they may put something else in I'd hope still of same type, like a RTX2070 from a different manufacturer

    • +12

      Surprised you didnt go with Crysis, tired joke regardless.

      • Doom is better.

      • It will eventually be "Can it run crysis remastered"

      • Ozb is rather strange. Top comment has the exact sarcasm with minesweeper yet that one gets upped

    • +2

      Wellllll actually it is now valid question with minecraft ray tracing loll

      • -1

        you're actually one of those people who get it…

  • -1

    Can this be used as a NAS?

    • +6

      Yeah I guess, so can a $600 Synology NAS or a $200 ex Govt PC….

      Would it make sense? No.

  • +8

    $3000 with a 2070 super?

    • +16

      That is the market now unfortunately. Looks like the 10900k is about a grand in its own, not my bag but comparable to Techfast with some upgrades to better ram, psu, etc.

      September seems likely for AMD and Nvidea releases, worth waiting for those who can.

  • +5

    ASRock, ADATA, GALAX… you sure it is 'the best'?

    • +12

      ASRock makes some really good boards, they definately have some cheap ones too. But their b450's and 570s are quite good. This price is way to expensive for a 2070s, though. Windows 10 is included, but unactivated haha..what a joke.

      • Not to mention the 2070S is a galax, which is a very cheap brand in the west.

        • … not in the east?

          • +1

            @Salmando: It's the most popular brand in Singapore.

            It's similar to TCL, their TVs are cheap and average in Australia, but they're the highest rated TVs in America.

            • @Frayin: TCL in America is completely different OS on the TV hardly comparable.

    • Galax is fine if you're not looking for the best OC card.

      Adata is also good as well.

    • Imagine thinking ADATA manufacturers memory chips.

      Yikes.

      And no gskill, corsair and team don't also.

      • Where does he boast ADATA manufacture the ram? Yes a lot of company's manufacture parts that are used elsewhere. Kogan use LG and Samsung panels, their TVs are terrible compared to both LG and Samsung though.

        I'm not sure what you're getting at with your comment? Other than trying to be politically correct.

  • +25

    I am so confused how this system is almost 2.9k on discount.

    • +1

      I’m also confused people negging on simple questions.

    • +1

      CPU is about a grand on its own, not cheap but not crazy for those who do to build and want the CPU grunt (I assume for non gaming tasks).

      • Yeah I have already factored that in, but I just surfed the web on better parts such as Corsair for RAM, M.2 500 GB Samsung EVO 870 etc and still managed to get a PC price of 2.9k.

        Assuming you want the CPU, i9 10900 over a R9 3900X is questionable, since the R9 is 250 cheaper with the only downside which is slightly weaker on single core compared to the i9.

        • +5

          You forgot to add labour cost, don't you.

            • -1

              @Diverse: Who would put together a PC, potentially troubleshoot, install OS, test and provide support for $50-70, including GST and employment overheads?

              I'll give you a hint - not anyone who takes themselves seriously.

              • -1

                @buffalo bill: Settle down. MSY, Centrecom and others charge between 50-100 AUD purely on labour+testing which I was basing off.

              • @buffalo bill: I can do it for you for that price

        • +28

          Hi Diverse,

          We would be happy to look at your parts list + prices to improve our future products.

          One of the factors that makes this PC more expensive is the Nzxt 360mm radiator. This will allow the CPU to adequately hit its max boost. We could easily downgrade the 360mm cooling and save $200. We could easily save money on the PSU by cheaping out on it but this would cause unreliable performance overtime and wouldn't let a user overclock it if they wanted to. These savings together could wipe $300 off the asking price. Using slower ram could save us up to $75-$90 but this may slow the overall performance of the system. On top of short supply and high prices we're doing our best to keep pricing competitive.

          OP

          • @CGB Solutions: Agreed. However, most OP's would go for 7nm ones due to 360mm cooler (compared to a 50$ cooler), z mobo (compared to a cheaper B550 mobo), cheaper PSU, less consumption/more environmental.

          • -2

            @CGB Solutions: You could use any 360mm AIO - using NZXT just adds $250 AUD.

            No one should ever be suggesting to cheapen out on the PSU - this makes perfectly sense.

          • +2

            @CGB Solutions:

            One of the factors that makes this PC more expensive is the Nzxt 360mm radiator. This will allow the CPU to adequately hit its max boost.

            I know what you're saying is correct but it's the difference between 5.1Ghz and 5.3Ghz if I recall correctly. Which is marginal.

            For those that don't know the 10 series i9 CPUs must be kept under 70C in order to achieve the highest turbo boost. This requires a lot of cooling performance.

            ^^ This should be treated with a grain of salt as I'm going on what I recall.

          • +1

            @CGB Solutions: The NZXT X73 is just a copy and paste Asetek 360 AIO. There are plenty of other more cost effective 280 and 360 AIOs that will do just as well. How ironic that what a 3900x can do with a stock fan you need an expensive AIO for the 10900k and be within 5%-10% on average in gaming at 1080p low.

        • +1

          This is the same comment made in Techfast threads. Horses for courses.

          • @beeze: TechFast has good deals though, the price of the CPU+GPU is the cost of their whole system, not for this deal though.

            • +5

              @Diverse: Agreed, but having some actual knowledge of the parts you will get is worth something on it's own.

              Guessing/hoping you don't get some yumcha parts and having to pay big upgrade costs to guarantee that has it's negatives too.

              FWIW, I fully understand and appreciate where both are coming from. These are still light years ahead of non pc specialist stores (like Harvey Norman for instance).

              • @scuderiarmani: Yep, not trying to knock on this deal which is the reason why I won't neg it.

          • +8

            @Beyond: Oh rubbish.

            Call up PCCG and tell them 'because I want a 3950x and a 2080ti you should give me a discount….'

            WTF are you on about?

          • +6

            @Beyond: So you're going to price up a list, using the cheapest prices you can find of course. Then call up the cheapest vendor you can find, and they're going to give you another 16% discount on top?

            You are dreaming.

            • -6

              @bobjane: You use the prices from the vendor's website as the baseline, of course. I saved my mate $700 on his order from Newegg two weeks ago.

              @Bobjane: I would have been more than happy to explain the logic and chosen wording regarding the approach if you had only questioned my statement constructively, other than making your own narrow-minded presumptions of the process.

              I may only be 26, but I've worked in numerous tech-related fields over the last nine years.

              When someone brings up something I'm not familiar with, I query, absorb the information, then use it how I choose, that's generally a reliable way to expand your thinking capacity.

              @scuderiarmani: I wasn't aware a "whole PC" consisted of just a CPU and GPU.

              • +5

                @Beyond: I wasn't aware of your make believe story.

                No part supplier is giving me a $500 discount because I've selected items.

              • +2

                @Beyond: You haggled with Newegg?

                Then they gave you $700 off $3000?

                Clearly fairytales, thanks for the laugh.

              • @Beyond: Could you please post the parts list including original pricing for your mates order from Newegg? Can you please also explain what your new, negotiated prices were after your got them down, as well as the process you used for obtaining the price reduction?

                Thanks in advance.

          • +2

            @Beyond: Bro which vendor is this? I would love go build a pc with them

    • +4

      Hi Beyond,

      I can confirm that the Samsung Storage is similar to a 970 Evo though it's the enterprise model. You'll see the same speeds though.

      OP

      • Hi, which model of the Samsung does this include?

    • +1

      So you don't like their choice of upgrades so you downvote?

      Unbelievable.

      PC Seller has to sell things to make a profit, not for what you can build it for….

      Clearly this isn't targeted for you.

      • They are price gouging on the upgrades, all pre-builts do this. That's where the margins are.

        In saying that, this really isn't a good deal at all, even considering the current market and supply situation. Usually these pre-builts will lure you in with the GPU&CPU combo, but that's not the case here..for reference, this exact same card was $750 just last weekend.

        • -1

          They all do it like you said, they have to…

          Techfast virtually charges the additional cost of the part without factoring in the existing part you purchased…..

          It's an awful time all round to buy a PC, and a 10900k is something that will command a premium too atm.

  • +10

    10900 with a 2070s hmmm… weird pairing.

    • Hi Gram,

      We would put a higher tier card in there but supply isn't stable enough for us to guarantee it for all orders.

      If you would like a higher model card we can get you a quote,

      OP

      • +14

        Fair enough but I'd reccomend putting in a lower tier cpu in there because at this pricepoint it does not make sense. Even the 10th i5's can harness the full potential of the 2070s. Then with the decrease in cpu you can slap in a 240mm instead of 360mm dropping the price by a couple hundred.

        • +5

          We listen to your suggestions and will take it into consideration

          OP

          • @CGB Solutions: must say I agree, a more balanced baseline build with i5 as base and i7 and i9 as upgrade kits (with the appropriate cooling) makes more sense. This also gets away from the impression of an overpriced 2070s build (which it isn't given the parts but that is what people see first and was certainly my first impression too until I realised the cooler used.).

    • +11

      With a 10900k?

      One stupid neg after another here.

    • +3

      Which one? I'd be curious to see if it's using lower tier parts compared to this.

      • -7

        not even bothering if getting negged before anyone knows the answers… have fun paying extra

        • +14

          You gotta back your claims with facts if you don't want to get negged.

        • -1

          Well mate, I bought a Pentium 2 233mhz for $3k in 1996 and it came with a 17" monitor… So on that basis this is shit right?

          If you can't understand that PC's are different I pity you.

        • +2

          Techfast doesn't stock the 10900K.

        • Tech fast who ships you cheapass B350 boards or H310?

          Yeah have fun with those

        • @BeRad your negs are stacking up and will go up higher. Have fun leaving stupid comments.

    • +6

      you can buy the components and follow the Verge's pc build.

      • May well be him, with his tweezers and all.

    • You might get it before Christmas

    • +1

      You left out the part where delivery took 3 months and the PSU died after a week.

      • +1

        But still made a glowing review in the forum's!

  • -1

    Can anyone please recommend me the best computer tower under $1000?

    was looking at this, very limited stock for towers locally
    https://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hp-pavilli…

    • +22

      Please, for the love of god don't buy a prebuilt at a store like that.

      If you MUST, go online with Dell when they have a sale, atleast you'll get great warranty….

      Otherwise, just get a techfast PC for the price.

      • thank you very much for the advice, I'm taking it this is a much better choice?-

        https://techfast.com.au/products/amd-ryzen-3-3100-gtx-1660-6…

        • +8

          Just look for past/current deals…. they often have prices better then they list on a website. If they've got a tonne of positive votes that's a good sign….

          As long as it has an SSD you'll be happy (atleast compared to the officeworks PC), if you wanna game, a GPU is obviously useful.

          FWIW, that PC you linked is lightyears ahead of the first.

        • Just be aware that the shipping time for techfast pc's are quite long.

          Best option is to try and build it yourself.

    • +1

      Cheapest online decent system I've seen in a while:

      $395

      • i5 7400
      • 8GB DDR4
      • 256GB NVME
      • Windows 10 Pro

      Balance of manufacturers original 3 year onsite 9x5 warranty thru 15/10/21.

      https://www.gumtree.com.au/s-ad/duncraig/desktops/lenovo-m71…

      • OK but Perth…..

      • +1

        You forgot the PSU.

        • Rip I’m an idiot :D
          Edit: Price doesn’t include PSU.

          • +1

            @OnlineShopper123: It's not important. Just buy some copper coils, wrap em around some sticks, then step back and solder any old cables you can find to the coils, then plug it in the wall.
            Something will happen

  • +1

    I learnt how to build PC's myself so I can choose premium parts and put it together myself not be locked into parts they offer for me as supposed upgrades..

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