• out of stock

Gaming PCs: ITX i5-12400F RTX 4060: $799 (OOS), i9-14900KF RTX 4090: $4373, R7-7800X3D RTX 4090: $3973 + Delivery @ TechFast

1820
12400F-4060-ITX14900KF-4090-MAR7800X3D-4090-MAR

As someone very wise once said: 🐐. Ozb loves an ITX banger, so here's a 12400F RTX 4060 build in the super awesome all-aluminium white Leaper Edge ITX case, with dual side panels (ventilated and glass).

And, more ultra-high tier 4090 builds for shipping in March, at all-time lows. If anyone has an unshipped 4090 order from Feb and would like to claim the $15 difference, please email [email protected] and we'll arrange it - price match applies to unshipped orders only.

Intel Core i5-12400F | RTX 4060 ITX Gaming PC: $799 after 12400F-4060-ITX OUT OF STOCK

  • Intel Core i5-12400F processor
  • RTX 4060 8GB (primarily PNY)
  • Biostar B760NH-E ITX DDR5 motherboard (doesn't feature on board WiFi but has a slot for a mini card to be installed)
  • 16GB DDR5 RAM (Kingston & Team in use)
  • 1TB Gen 4 SSD (Adata Legend 800)
  • 750W PSU
  • Leaper Edge ITX white aluminium case with dual panels

Intel Core i9-14900KF | RTX 4090 Gaming PC: $4388 $4373 after 14900KF-4090-MAR (Mod note: wrong price corrected.)

  • Intel Core i9-14900KF processor
  • RTX 4090 24GB graphics (primarily PNY Verto in use)
  • Z790 WiFi motherboard (MSI Z790 Pro in use)
  • 32GB 5200MHZ DDR5 RAM (XPG Lancer and TeamGroup Delta in use)
  • 1TB Gen4 NVME (Legend 800)
  • 850W Gold PSU (MSI and XPG in use)
  • 360mm Liquid Cooler (MSI)
  • Antec P20C case

AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D | RTX 4090 Gaming PC: $3988 $3973 after 7800X3D-4090-MAR (Mod note: wrong price corrected.)

  • AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D processor
  • RTX 4090 24GB graphics (primarily PNY Verto in use)
  • AMD B650M motherboard with AX WiFi (MSI B650M Gaming WiFi or MSI B650M-P with a USB adapter)
  • 32GB 5200MHZ DDR5 RAM (XPG Lancer and TeamGroup Delta in use)
  • 1TB Gen4 NVME (Legend 800)
  • 850W Gold PSU (MSI and XPG in use)
  • 240mm Liquid Cooler (brand/model may vary but wouldn't be MSI, upgrade to 360mm if you would like the MSI)
  • Antec P20C case

All our current deals

NVIDIA

RTX 4080 Super Gaming PC: i9 14900KF $2948
RTX 4080 Super Gaming PCs: i7-14700F: $2488, R5-7500F: $2368
RTX 4070 Ti Super Gaming PCs: i9-14900KF: $2628, R7 7800X3D: $2328
RTX 4070 Ti Super | Ryzen 5 7500F Gaming PC: $1888
RTX 4070 Super Gaming PCs: R5-7500F | RTX 4070S: $1588, i5-14400F | RTX 4070S: $1688
RTX 3060 Gaming PC: i5-12400F: $699

AMD

RX 7800 XT and 7900 XT Gaming PCs: R5-7500F RX 7800 XT: $1488, R7-7800X3D RX 7900 XT: $2128 w/ 16GB RAM/1TB NVMe/750G PSU
RX 7900 XTX Gaming PC: Gaming PCs: R7 7800X3D | RX 7900 XTX: $2488

Cheers
Caleb, Luke and Zac

Related Stores

TechFast
TechFast

Comments

  • +11

    Wow! Great deal for $799!

  • +11

    I need none of these upgrades in my life. But doesn't mean I don't want them. Geez, it's a hard fight to keep my wallet closed, especially at these prices!

  • +1

    4060 or 3070?

    • +1

      If you mean the techfast 3070 deal that is out of stock, but the 3070 has better performance but no frame gen

      • +1

        You can use the Nukem mod to replace any DLSS3 game with FSR3 and apparently it works really well. This mod is exclusive to RTX GPUs.

        The other Lukefz mod also works well and works for any GPU on the market.

        So definitely get the 3070, it'll crush the 4060 with the FSR3 mod.

    • Would you say 3070 for pure rasta and 4060 for frame gen?

      • Remember frame gen comes at the cost of latency and, I would go with the 4060, it's 2 yrs newer, better software but pure Rasta it gets clapped by the 3070

        Also the mod for the 3070 can be really buggy especially with things like shadows and menus

  • +2

    what cant you play on a 4060?

    • +2

      You can play most games at ultra setting 1080P, except few demanding games, especially the newer titles. You many able to play at 1440P, just at lower graphic setting.

    • -1

      Just get a series x, play on 4k with no issues for AAA titles then use a pc for general browsing, sailing the high seas or playing classics like CS or AoE and other shenanigans

      • +1

        the xbox cost more/same as a pc….

        • -2

          It costs less than a pc that can play games on ultra at 1080p. You can play on 4k on any size TV or monitor @ 120fps.. To get that kind of performance from a pc you're spending a few grand at least. I reckon the console for gaming, low-mid range pc like the $800 one here for everything else. Including a very good monitor, you'll have spent less than buying a pc with the 4090 all combined. I say that because I can't afford to spend almost 4k on a 4090.

          • +2

            @spacemannn: Consoles do not play games on Ultra pc settings. Console versions have a mixed bag of settings as the devs are optimizing specifically for that hardware to get that minimum 30-60fps.

            RDR2 is a good example, most of the 'console' settings for that game are below the minimum available for PC.

            Insurgency:Sandstorm during its console conversion has had the PC settings dumbed down and some completely removed.

  • +1

    amazing work on the 4060 deal

  • Hi Luke, does this have any PCI-e slot for a PCI-e wifi card? that is kind of a deal breaker for me.

  • +8

    "TechFast is going to post so many epic gaming PC deals, you may even get tired of their unbeatable deals and you'll say, 'Please, please, there's too many deals, we can't take it anymore Luke, it's too much!' and Luke will say: 'No it isn't! We have to keep posting more epic gaming PCs, we have to post MORE, we're going to post MORE, we're going post SO MANY gaming PC deals!"

  • I'm considering upgrading for some photo processing, is that $799 model going to leave me disappointed?

    Currently using my Dell xps i7-8750 32gb ram and 2tb SSD.

    • +3

      your current CPU is 6C/12T, and so is that i5, so core/thread wise it's the same, but because it's 4 generations newer the raw CPU power is quite a bit higher (Passmark: your i7 scores 9941, versus that i5 scoring 19551, so almost double).
      In general a laptop is slower than a desktop, so you can easily assume twice the CPU grunt with the TechFast system.
      Just add more RAM (assuming editing is RAM-hungry) and more storage (both easily done yourself, or with significant extra cost by TF) and you'll be good for years.

      • +1

        They are also on a laptop, so big difference there

      • Cheers. I upgraded the RAM and SSD on this Dell myself so should be good. Next is to shop for a good colour accurate monitor, or one which I can calibrate with the spyder.

    • the 4060 offers a lot of additional benefits in performance with lightroom and other apps.
      Things like generative fill and AI-Denoise benefit a huge amount from an RTX gpu

  • -3

    Says $999 on the website. Did I click the wrong button.

    • +2

      Use the coupon code
      12400F-4060-ITX

      • +13

        OzB 101, can't read and follow instructions

      • +3

        Ah I am a moron

        • +1

          Newbie :-)

  • +5

    Waiting for a 7500F, RTX 4060 deal.

    • There is one on ozbargain already

  • also, is there another slot for a 2nd SSD drive? either M2 or SATA?

    • On the ITX, just one NVME but 4 SATA. Z790 always has 2 x NVME and lots of SATA, the B650 the same.

  • +1

    Just a heads up. I was just starting to panic from a lack of contact but just got 3 replies. Apparently there's a 5~10 day queue .. I didn't read/notice that anywhere, just read the standard 1 to 2 days.

  • Hey OZBs,

    Can someone please tell me

    Intel Core i9-14900KF | RTX 4090 Gaming PC(techfast.com.au): $4388

    Vs

    https://www.hp.com/au-en/shop/omen-by-hp-45l-gaming-desktop-… For $5,200 with 3yrs 3 day warranty? I have got a negotiated price.

    • +13

      Custom builds > Pre-built OEM f**kery (including but not limited to: lucky-dip no-name components, funky proprietary mobos, vendor-locked BIOS/UEFI configs, no upgradeability, warranties that are void if the case is touched inappropriately, 1001 bundled bloatware/spyware applications, etc, etc.)

      • Thanks for your input, really appreciated

      • The Omen uses a standard microATX motherboard and power supply it seems, so it is upgradable. They also seem to use ok parts. Still not worth it regardless.

        • +1

          Yeah nah, never trust OEM gaming PCs. The HP Omen is also more far more expensive for slightly worse gaming performance overall (as the 7800X3D in TechFast's build is better for gaming than the i9-14900K) so there's literally no upside to the Omen PC. On top of that, after-sales support and warranty claims would be a massive pain in the ass as HP do not offer on-site repair with the included 1-year warranty, lol.

    • +7

      All this is at a glance (i.e. I'm probably wrong or have omitted details)

      1. Give your money to a small, aussie-owned business or give your money to an international conglomerate
      2. HP might stick you with proprietary parts that are difficult to replace - e.g. mobo, PSU
      3. For an extra $800 you can also probably get 3 years warranty and a few extra upgrades on the TechFast machine to get it closer to the HP one (e.g. RAM and Storage)
      4. Different cases - up to your taste
      5. Both machines are probably over spec'd for what you'd ever use it for, so it's probably down to what you want to flex at the end of the day :)
  • +1

    Does Techfast allow varying the components? For example, I'd like a different case and 64gb of DDR5-6000. I'd probably also want a Samsung SSD rather than the Legend

    • I've never seen them post a deal with 6000mhz ram or as an upgrade option so I'm guessing they don't have any.

  • which brand is 650w psu upgrade option for 4060 deal?

    • Gigabyte P650B

  • Is it possible to have an option of that 4060 removed? So I can use my own graphics card?

    • If you can afford it (plus slight hassle) buy it and sell the card?

    • Same here just bought a 4070 card so don't need that.
      @luketechfast can you get any models without Graphics card?

  • Anyone know how painful or easy to install windows plus all drivers on the already there Linux Mint?

    • +4

      Pretty easy.

      1. Get a 16GB or larger USB drive, download the Windows Installation Media Creation Tool, run it and follow the simple instructions to select your designated USB drive and download the latest Windows 11 image onto it.
      2. Connect the USB drive to the new PC and boot from it (entering the boot menu is a case of pressing F12 after powering on the PC with most motherboards).
      3. Follow the on-screen instructions in the Windows installation wizard to install Windows.
      4. Once the install is complete, you'll be presented with the Windows OOBE (out-of-box-experience) wizard to complete the initial setup process.

      Obviously, you'll need a valid Windows 11 OEM or retail licence.
      Additional steps may include changing some BIOS/UEFI settings, if required (but with most new PCs this won't be necessary).

      • Thx, so this will auto wipe out the Linux on the SSD?

        • Correct, the Windows installation wizard will overwrite all data/existing OSes on the selected storage device so there's no need to reformat/wipe the disk prior to installing. You should probably just delete all of the existing partitions on the disk (which you can do through the installation wizard) and then the installer will create the usual three Windows installation partitions (boot, recovery and primary).

        • You can format the drive during the Windows install process, you'll see it when you get there.

      • Make sure you download an ISO that disable the Windows Hotmail login during installation.

    • +1

      I just did this with a new techfast build. Not too hard. Just download windows on another computer, put it on a thumb drive and boot from it via the BIOS and it's just clicking next next next from there. I used MAS and didn't need to buy a licence

      • Thx, I can live with unactivated windows, that watermark doesnt really bother me at all, so all drivers including GPU updated no issue for all the build components too?

        • +1

          so all drivers including GPU updated no issue for all the build components too?

          Just Google the model name of each piece of hardware followed by "driver" in the search query and you'll find the driver downloads on the relevant manufacturer's website (e.g. "MSI Z790 Pro motherboard drivers"). All of the components will have Windows 11-compatible drivers.

          I wouldn't rely on any driver updater utilities (even if they're from the manufacturer themselves) as they almost always fail to include certain drivers that are relevant for your hardware and they're usually borderline-bloatware applications that are complete afterthoughts in terms of reliability/functionality and many of them will constantly nag you about updates and/or install them in the background without your consent.

            • +2

              @ldd-mn: Not if you actually care about getting the right drivers and ensuring optimal system performance.

              For most home users using OEM PCs, Windows Update will do a good enough job.

              For custom gaming builds, you should do the original driver installs manually. From then on, you only need to be updating the GPU drivers regularly as all motherboards stop receiving new driver releases around 2 years after launch. GPU drivers are updated on a weekly/monthly basis for much longer time after the release of any GPU generation.

                • +2

                  @ldd-mn: Probably because you're not that tech-savvy (no offence).

                  If you actually checked the installed driver for each hardware component in Device Manager, you'd find Windows update most likely hasn't ever installed the manufacturer's specific drivers for a variety of hardware in your system and Windows is using generic Microsoft drivers for many components, especially if you have a custom-built PC and particularly for the more obscure, non-big ticket components like storage controllers, USB controllers, integrated sound chipsets, network adapters, Intel/AMD processor chipset drivers, Thunderbolt controller drivers, etc.

                  On top of that Windows Update often grabs the wrong drivers for certain hardware and can actually cause driver conflicts/OS issues that need to be resolved by manually installing the correct drivers.

                  Microsoft doesn't really have a QA department for Windows updates anymore (due to rampant cost-cutting over the past decade and a focus on other products/services) and the amount of internal testing that the entire Windows Update component is subjected to along with all new KBs is shockingly minimal. The beta-testing team is now the entire global userbase of Microsoft operating systems and update quality/reliability has been a joke inside the industry for the better part of a decade now. All Microsoft have to do is monitor update telemetry data from every Windows install worldwide to determine which updates are causing issues and what fixes are required; they really don't give a sh*t if their updates are bricking tens of thousands of computers worldwide and forcing users to reinstall Windows from scratch (which has happened more times than can be possibly documented).

                  Enthusiasts/gamers who care about having full control and maximum reliability/performance do still install drivers manually and also go to the extent of disabling driver updates via Windows Update.

                    • +2

                      @ldd-mn:

                      I love when people say "no offence", it's such a great saying. Thank you for that.

                      I also love when people assume others are talking from a place of ignorance instead of years of career-specific experience that considerably outweighs their limited exposure to the topic at hand.

                      I highly doubt TechFast is manually installing their drivers for every single system they sell either.

                      Neither TechFast nor anyone else claimed they did. Hence why I said, you should do the initial driver installs manually yourself. For most builds it takes about 30 minutes or less and it considerably reduces the future chances of Windows update pushing some weird, incompatible drivers onto your system that potentially causes issues.

                      My point was more about trusting Microsoft to do the right thing by their home users/consumers and assuming they genuinely give a sh*t whether Windows users have the right drivers installed for their hardware, which is a very naive assumption to make if you know anything about the state of Windows patching today.

        • -1

          Nope no issues. On first boot after windows is installed you get a popup from msi to update all the drivers, that's it

  • What are the usb port specs for the ITX case @luketechfast ?

  • Loving the ITX deals

  • +1

    Prematurely got excited and thought the system with the RTX 4090 was an itx system

  • Would the Intel Core i5-12400F PC at $799 be a decent all-rounder machine? i.e. good for casual gaming, general productivity and 4K video editing?

    • Extremely

      • Great, thank you!

      • +1

        ITXtremely

  • +1

    My kids want to play roblox and games like Five nights at Freddy’s and Poppys playtime. Will the $799 computer be okay for these?

    • Yes and many more

  • +1

    What combination of HDMI and displayport sockets does this end up with?

  • How much for just the 4060 card on its own?

  • MSI B650M-P with AX3000 adapter (USB???) is not a WiFi motherboard. I would be very disappointed if I bought and received this. You might be better off restricting quantities @luketechfast and perhaps listing a separate deal or otherwise distinguishing it

    • I would be very disappointed if I bought and received this.

      Why?

      It makes zero difference to the WiFi functionality or performance. If anything a dedicated WiFi PCIe card will probably perform better than integrated WiFi radios on a mobo, especially if you use the included external antenna with the card.

      • +3

        Historically it's always been USB. The MSI B650M-P can't fit another PCIe card with a 4090.

        I've had many problems with USB WiFi adaptors, and previous deal comments suggest I'm not alone in this. YMMV

        • That's weird because TechFast's specs for that build list:

          AMD B650M WiFi motherboard (MSI B650M Gaming WiFi or MSI B650M-P with AX3000 adapter)

          A quick Google search shows there's no such thing as a TP-Link AX3000 USB WiFi adapter, only PCIe.

          Either TechFast have found a way to shoehorn in that PCIe card with an RTX 4090 on that particular mobo or you need to clarify it with them.

          • @Gnostikos: I am asking them to clarify here in public for prospective buyers.

            No suggestion it's TP Link. Even the deal link under the networking tab has "AX3000 Tri-Band USB Wi-Fi 6 Adapter", so such a thing exists and is stocked by them.

            • @daffyd:

              Even the deal link under the networking tab has "AX3000 Tri-Band USB Wi-Fi 6 Adapter", so such a thing exists and is stocked by them.

              Well that's clear as mud because there's a huge range of WiFi adapters (both USB and PCIe) with AX3000 in the model name.
              So yes in that case, that will almost certainly be a USB adapter of whatever they have in-stock when the build is shipped out.

              Good point you raised however I still don't see how that really makes the overall build "worse" in any tangible way or how it's inferior to a motherboard with integrated WiFi.

              • @Gnostikos: Integrated wifi usually comes with bluetooth chip btw… So thats one less USB port taken.

          • @Gnostikos: I mean there is this: https://www.tp-link.com/au/home-networking/high-gain-adapter…

            seems very high quality so hopefully its that but I'm very doubtful lol.'

            edit: its dual band while the techfast one states its triband so probs not it, it might be this: https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005005562499104.html

            Can we get luke on this please

    • +3

      Thanks for the feedback - I am working on a solution.

      • Thanks Luke, please let me know when you find out as I recently bought the 4070 super build and I’m also wondering what the ax3000 usb is.

  • +1

    Any names for the 750w on the ITX

    • +2

      OP can respond but it will be allied (generic).
      If I was buying, for $39 I'd upgrade to the gigabyte bronze.

  • +2

    Waiting for 6700xt deals!

    • 6800XT deals :-)

  • 32gb ram upgrade costs $200 for 4060 deal….

    • +2

      Upgrade it yourself?

    • It's $89.00 now!

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