Gaming PC: R5 7500F, RTX 5060, 1TB Gen4 SSD, 240mm AIO, 32GB RAM, B650M PLUS WIFI, 650W Silver PSU $1688 + $50 Del @ Nebula PC

810
OZB_LUNARNY_$500OFF

Hi OzBargain,

Banger deal today with the RTX 5060 with OzBargain favourites that isn't just bottom of the barrel. This deal likely is and will be the best priced possible for the foreseeable future for this configuration. OzBargain favourite front mesh panel case, AM5 platform, 240mm AIO liquid cooler, 32GB DDR5 RAM and a solid 650W PSU. We've had to go with single-channel DDR5 instead of dual-channel to offer this price and achieve 32GBs of RAM, which is much preferred and better than 16GBs (2x8GB). Understandably, there will be a slight performance loss; however, a middle ground has to be met with the current pricing. At this stage, the pricing will only go up. I believe the cost savings on this to make this deal happen is much better than having a 500GB SSD or a stock AMD Wraith cooler. I hope the compromise can be accepted for OzBargain, considering the hundreds of dollars in savings. Please let me know your feedback and thoughts. I am open to anything!

I will get back to all comments and PMs shortly. Unfortunately, I won't be available to reply for just today after posting.

What makes us different?

  • Guaranteed within one business day response time for email, phone and live chat support
  • We’re proud to offer a fair and transparent price that our competitors struggle to match with a quality service
  • Usage of only premium high-end components with the absolute best value - all components are listed
  • Each PC is quality controlled seriously before despatch, we run checks on all components multiple and stress tests including 3DMark and MemTest86
  • 3 years return to base warranty and lifetime support included on all purchases
  • All PCs shipped are packaged carefully – no internals can move during transit as we use protective packaging around all parts inside - more info
  • Your PC is built with passion, we don’t take shortcuts and keep all cabling tidy whether you can see them or not - more info

🎁 Bonus FREE Nebula Lunar New Year red pockets as well with every order!

Introducing the Vanta - NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 - 8GB - Ryzen 5 7500F - $1688 after OZB_LUNARNY_$500OFF
  • GPU - NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 - 8GB (BRAND MAY VARY)
  • CPU - AMD Ryzen 5 7500F | 6 Cores | 3.7 GHz (Max 5 GHz)
  • CPU Cooler - Nebula HydraCore 240mm ARGB Liquid Cooler - Black
  • Motherboard - GIGABYTE B650M GAMING PLUS WIFI - DDR5
  • RAM - Team T-Force Delta RGB 32GB (1x32GB) 6000MHz DDR5 - Black
  • SSD - 1TB Team MP44Q 1TB Gen4 M.2 (R: 7000MB/s | W: 5900MB/s)
  • PSU - GIGABYTE P650SS 650W 80+ Silver
  • Case - MSI MAG FORGE 130A AIRFLOW ATX Case - Black

Below is the PCPartPicker list and prices for Vanta - NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 - 8GB - Ryzen 5 7500F:
PCPartPicker Part List

Type Item Price
CPU AMD Ryzen 5 7500F 3.7 GHz 6-Core Processor $269.00 @ Centre Com
Motherboard Gigabyte B650M GAMING PLUS WIFI Micro ATX AM5 Motherboard $139.00 @ MSY Technology
Storage TEAMGROUP MP44Q 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive $219.00
Case MSI MAG FORGE 130A AIRFLOW ATX Mid Tower Case $65.00 @ JW Computers
Power Supply Gigabyte P650SS 650 W 80+ Silver Certified ATX Power Supply $69.00 @ Centre Com
Custom NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 - 8GB (BRAND MAY VARY) $529.00
Custom Nebula HydraCore 240mm ARGB Liquid Cooler - Black $99.00
Custom Team T-Force Delta RGB 32GB (1x32GB) 6000MHz DDR5 - Black $449.00
Prices include shipping, taxes, rebates, and discounts
Total $1838.00
Generated by PCPartPicker 2026-02-08 23:31 AEDT+1100

🛠️ Current build times are 10-15 business days from order date.

Any questions please let me know!

www.nebulapc.com.au
Phone: 1300 553 985
Email: sales@nebulapc.com.au

Cheers,
Lawrence

Other Deals

RX 9070

Gaming PC: R7 7800X3D, RX 9070, 1TB Gen5 SSD, TUF B650EM-E, 32GB CL30 RAM, 240mm AIO, 750W Gold PSU $2588 + $50 Del @ Nebula PC

BYO GPU

BYO GPU PCs: R7 7800X3D, TUF B650EM-E, 32GB 6000Mz RAM, 240mm AIO, 1TB SSD, 850W Gold: $1548 | 7500F $1248 + $50 Del @ Nebula PC

This is part of Lunar New Year Deals for 2026

Related Stores

Nebula PC
Nebula PC

Comments

Search through all the comments in this post.
  • +4

    Buy computer
    Sell Ram
    ????
    Profit!

  • +12

    State of PC building right now this is a decent price well done Nebula.

    • +1

      This is a $700 computer being sold for $1700.
      Yeah currently the state of Gaming PCs :\

      • 700 is a stretch but yeah agreed, depressing, glad I built last year.

        • +1

          Well, that RAM is fast but it's held back by that CPU. It's not much different than a 5800X. And that 8GB GPU is around an RTX-3070Ti level.

          edit:
          https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/801147

          found this for $900 odd dollars from 3 Years ago. Which isn't much faster/slower than the above configuration. So yeah, I think $700 isn't much of a stretch. We're just in Looney Period : \

  • +10

    Shame nebula couldn't fix my pc i bought from them. They tried fixing it twice and found no issues, even replacing some parts which i was sure would fix it. However each time it broke down after a few days of light gaming / use. Their transport service for pick up/ drop off was also not great (very little to no communication). Not going through that again.

    • What would happen to the PC and what did they replace?

      • They tried to fix it by replacing the cpu and ram. As i said in another comment in this post, the screen would go black out of nowhere. I think it was either the gpu or something wrong with the ram slots, as reseating the ram actually made it turn on again for a bit. After some time of use (10-30min), the screen would go black but the pc would stay on. I'd turn it off and then it wouldn't turn on again. A few days later it would turn on as normal but then the same problem would occur or sometimes the screen wouldn't turn on. I tried to follow their suggestions but none of these fixed the pc either sadly.

    • +3

      For cases where we can't replicate a fault, it is extremely difficult for both ends. For all cases, we would send all testing results, trying to replicate a fault to pinpoint what is wrong. Unfortunately, the nature of electronics can be unreliable, and in cases like these, we always offer a remedy to ensure you are satisfied. Even you mentioned yourself that even after replacing some parts, you would be sure it would resolve the issue, but it didn't. I'm not familiar with your case exactly, but likely we either would've offered a refund or a complete brand new build for all components after replacing parts that were likely causing the issue.

      If you allow, I am more than happy to share the test results publicly to show what we did to try replicate a fault. Please PM me your details, and we can maybe ask OzBargain for further input.

      I am sorry we couldn't be of service to you.

  • +5

    Changed the GPU and CPU and the code didn't work. Is it only for that exact build?

    • Just need to wait 30 seconds or so for the system to recognise your build, it'll work!

  • +1

    @Nebula PC any byo gpu deals?

    • No guarantee at this stage with the current landscape, likely won't be competitive considering the current RAM and SSD pricing :(.

  • Anything similar with 5070?

  • +12

    im long time ozbargainer, just created an account to say this:

    bought a PC from nebula last year,
    look ages for delivery
    now that its delivered, has issues with sporadic power outages.
    so far nebula is sending me youtube videos and asking me to do the troubleshooting.
    the (profanity) is the point of buying a pre-built PC if i have to do the trouble-shooting.
    why the (profanity) are they not tested before to delivery.
    unfortunately, this is not rare. youre getting bottom of the barrel shit-tier parts, thats why its cheap and breaks down.
    and no they dont (profanity) stress test them. if they did these issues would not happen this often.
    similar issues echoed on reddit.

    tldr good deals because youre getting (profanity) on the parts. 0/10 would not recommend.

    • Which deal did you buy? And where are the Reddit threads of people with the same issues?

      • +1

        I had the same experience but it happened after almost 2yrs of use. The one i got was the 2023 nov deal of gaming PC: RX 7800XT 16GB, Ryzen 5 7500F, 500GB M.2, 32GB 5200MHz DDR5 RAM, MSI A620M-E, 650W

        • +3

          If you can you should build your own.
          I still have my Jan 2023 build using quality parts and it's flawless. Always good to know what parts you are putting in.

        • +1

          What problems did you have with yours? Looks like we had the exact same build from the same sale, my GPU failed in December and is with them for warranty but the rest was still great

          • @AustralianJesus: Oh wow sounds like they used bad/cheap parts for that deal. For me I think it was either the gpu or something wrong with the ram slots, as resitting the ram actually made it turn on again for a bit. After some time of use (10-30min), the screen would go black but the pc would stay on. I'd turn it off and then it wouldn't turn on again. A few days later it would turn on as normal but then the same problem would occur or sometimes the screen wouldn't turn on.

            • +1

              @MarshallMatters: Yeah interesting, same deal think I just opted for a different motherboard, the GPU has been the only issue sort of just blew up out of nowhere, rest have been solid without issue

              • @AustralianJesus: Yeah maybe it was the gpu for me too but i don't understand why their tests didn't pick it up if that's the case.

          • @AustralianJesus: Still waiting since dec? My gpu has a failing fan but hesitant to send it back for rma if the waits that long

            • +1

              @Postal Dude: Started the process late December, shipped it off 5th of Jan and they said the RMA process started on 29th of jan of and could take 6-8 weeks at best

              • @AustralianJesus: Damn that sucks

              • +1

                @AustralianJesus: This is the AsRock 7800XT case, correct? I have some news for you tomorrow. Hang tight, it'll be good for you, and the good news is seems the process will not take 6-8 weeks from the 29th of January.

            • +1

              @Postal Dude: If we have the GPU on hand, we will provide an advanced replacement for you, provided the issue is replicable. Please email or PM me your details, and we will start the process ASAP. Our RMA process with advanced replacements is potentially much faster than other resellers, where they will need to wait for a repair or replacement. This is provided we have the item on hand or a like for like product.

              • @Nebula PC: Thanks, I was going to wait a little bit anyway as I was hoping it would get worse/be more consistent, as sometimes the failing fan will just decide to sound fine for hours at a time, hoping the bearing gets worse so it gets to a point where someone testing it will definitely hear it quickly

    • +2

      I had an issue with power outage as well. After all troubleshooting failed I went with the IT Crowd logic of “is it plugged into the wall” and changed the power board and haven’t had an outage since (close to a year now).
      TGG were shocked when I demanded a replacement power board (energizer brand) and weee confused when I explained the issue but who cares.

    • +3

      I'm not sure if this is a troll comment based on the way it was written. I deeply apologise for the long wait time for the previous deals. I have no excuse - we were simply overwhelmed during the busy period.

      I'm also not sure what the bottom-of-the-barrel parts you are referring to are. We are listing the majority of components, and most are from tier one or reputable vendors rather than unlisted or no local market presence vendors.

      If you are experiencing issues, the first thing we do is try to troubleshoot remotely to reduce downtime for you and try resolve the issue remotely if possible. If you aren't comfortable with that, we will arrange a return and investigate further.

      Unfortunately, the nature of electronics can be unreliable. With the volume we are moving, there will inevitably be faults. Despite how frustrating troubleshooting can be, this is a standard procedure. All systems are backed by our three-year return-to-base warranty and lifetime support. Moreover, the 1% of people with issues are more likely than not to be frustrated publicly and vent understandably but it isn't an accurate representation of how many faults there are amongst systems shipped. For cases like yours, it's extremely unlucky and we can only ask for your patience and work together to provide a remedy that is suitable.

      All systems are tested prior to delivery, and even if they pass all testing, sometimes once you receive the system, there might be a fault. It sounds hard to believe, but please understand this is our industry. Our warranty procedure is extremely reasonable, and we always act in the best interest of the customer.

      For your particular case, please PM me your details, and we will provide a remedy that you are satisfied with. Either a full refund, replacement or repair.

  • +3

    I'm not here to stick up for Nebula but Techfast didn't even tell you what parts you were getting in your pcs it was the luck of the draw to not get absolute garbage until the community started to scrutinise them for it, only 1 year warranty from the seller to comply with the ACCC but they did have the best deals in town.

    Parts will fail after stress testing is done I've seen it happen myself regardless of how much testing is done after a period of time (for me i bought my own pc built, stress tested for 24 hours cpu ram gpu the whole lot and it cpu failed the week after just from my experience) and aftershipping god knows what has happened during transit.

    • This was in reply to @OZ111

    • +1

      Agreed. Techfast is shithouse.

      I built my own PC before and ran without issues until PSU died, went to MSY and got a replacement for free no question asked.

      ima not expecting a everything to run perfect.
      but I think nebula has a higher failure rate than whats expected.
      when you buy a PC, you own the parts, Nebula should send you the serial and product details.
      without them, youre reliant on them for warranty. and its a huge (profanity)-around.

      ima time poor, big reason why i bought from nebula.
      and i guess this is the issue with online PC purchases in general, not exclusive to nebula.

      • Yeah i wouldn't be surprised there's a reason MSY doesn't argue much anymore 😂

        It sucks it takes time to resolve the issue but they are dealing with it instead of you having to pay for postage and e-mailing back and forth for weeks on end (if within the 3 year warranty period) they generally buy bulk from suppliers to keep the cost down only reason they can do most of these deals they scan the sn into the system once and they will know if it went through them or not

        Edit - Only thing I'd change with this build if possible would be to change it to an air cooler($30-$55 Thermalright IFYKYK) drop the speed of the nvme or pick up https://www.centrecom.com.au/team-group-g70-pro-1tb-m2-pcie-… to replace that $300 price tag and spend that bit extra for the 5060ti or even 5070 as an option while still proving the 2x16 32gb ddr5 cl30/cl36 just my opinion

    • Aw bummer, just bought from techfast. They seemed to have really good reviews.

      • +1

        It's luck of the draw. I had slow shipping bit they assisted with troubleshooting an issue after a bios update. The systems were actually cable managed quite well. Would use them again but you may be waiting a while to receive your system.

        No one wants to handle returns on a system so just hope you get a good one.

        • Yeah I've had mine for about a few weeks now, bought during their last sale right before Christmas break.

          It's working great so far, hoping no issues come up. Shipping it back seems like a huge hassle.

      • You should be right. I bought a bargain basement system from them about 8 years ago about $600 with monitor Ryzen 2600 / Rx570 it went for years no hastles. Shows how bad pricing has got, now youre looking at that money alone for a bottom tier video card.

        • Oh wow they've been around for a while. That's actually pretty reassuring. Kind of amazing you could get a monitor at that price lol.

  • 8GB GPU isn't even worth touching.

    • +1

      Games will run on it, web browsing will run on it, everything will run on it. Would 2% of things run 5% better on a 16gb certainly but your comment is otherwise personal opinion for your use case for which I would recommend a 5090 32gb for your 'needs'.

      • +2

        I know you're being sarcastic, but he's right…. you should be buying an 8gb card in 2026..

        I have a 12gb 4070ti which ran out of vram playing Indiana Jones. It's only going to get more demanding as time goes on.

        • +3

          you should[n't] be buying an 8gb card in 2026..

          If the buyer is limited by budget there are not many options available when both Nvidia and AMD only have 8GB cards available at this price point. You could go Intel for another 2-4GB of VRAM but the drivers (though serviceable) are worse overall and the bigger concern is who knows if they'll still be updating them in 5 years.

          Even TechSpot / Hardware Unboxed — who hate 8GB GPUs — recommend an 8GB GPU at the entry-level performance class.

          When it all shakes out, the Radeon 9060 XT 8GB is probably the best sub-$300 [USD] value […]

          As important as VRAM is (and as much as we hate that AMD and Nvidia are still selling new GPUs with just 8GB), it's not everything.

          Plus tbh for a pre-built, sales would probably go down for swapping because buyers generally prefer Nvidia > AMD > Intel (whether or not it's justified is out of scope).

  • How does this $1599 system compare?

    1. AMD Ryzen 7 8745HX with 8 cores (same 32MB L3 cache as 7500F).
    2. Comes with Windows 11 Home.
    3. Maybe better warranty as it's from Lenovo.

    Downside:

    1. 16GB vs Op's 32GB.

    https://www.centrecom.com.au/lenovo-loq-tower-26adr10-ryzen-…

    • Unusual to see laptop ram (sodimms) in a tower, not sure if it matters with performance much.

      • +2

        Probably using this motherboard.
        Proprietary mobo, with soldered CPU. So I'd stay away.

      • Might be a good thing nowadays. Since laptop ddr5 is cheaper than desktop.

    • That’s a laptop processor/mobo/ram in a desktop case. I’d go with the nebula build, you’ll have more flexibility when it comes to upgrading

  • +1

    I know ddr5 is less 1t/2t sensitive then dd4 but isn't 2x16gb > than 1x32gb. Is there a 2 stick option?

  • +3

    Might get downvoted but. Not an amazing deal. Only half decent.
    Here's a list I whipped up on PCPP For $1845 vs $1688+50(del) of Nebula.
    I upgraded to a 16gb 9060xt cause I believe that's the bare minimum..
    With an asus dual 5060 8gb you can further reduce $70 and be within touching distance.

    If you go with an aliexpress cpu, there's a bit more money to be saved.

    • +2

      Also, MP44Q 2TB is available for $279
      So, putting

      TEAMGROUP MP44Q 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive(au.pcpartpicker.com) $319.00 @ JW Computers

      For reference to inflate the comparison price is just scummy. We've come to expect better from you lot.

    • Yeah, it’s also a shame that the last-gen equivalent of this build used to be less than half the price

      https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/910432

    • How is warranty handled for Aliexpress CPUs?

      • Non existent. If something is faulty, you can easily return.

        But have purchased over 10 CPUs over 3 years. Never had a problem. Probably the least likely component to be faulty. (Although Asrock might disagree)

        Besides, some sellers might offer warranties, where you'll have to ship it to them.

  • +3

    We've had to go with single-channel DDR5 instead of dual-channel to offer this price and achieve 32GBs of RAM, which is much preferred and better than 16GBs (2x8GB).

    Opinions will vary of course, but given the lower-end nature of the rest of the system, it feels awkward to me to make the upgrade path be having 64GB of RAM which you surely won't be making use of with a 7500F and 5060 (or requiring you to faff around with selling your 1x32GB to buy a 2x16GB when it's cheaper). Without knowing your exact pricing, I would've thought that either of the 1x16GB or 2x8GB options — assuming the cost of the system goes down — would've been better. At least with the former you have a straightforward, sensible upgrade path despite shipping in a single-channel configuration.

    • You dont need to. You could just add 8GB later and youd have 16GB of Dual Channel and 24GB of single, thanks to Flex Mode.

      • You could just add 8GB later and youd have 16GB of Dual Channel and 24GB of single, thanks to Flex Mode.

        With this approach you end up:

        • having 16GB of the memory configuration you actually want
        • buying 32GB of expensive RAM + 8GB of cheap RAM

        This approach isn't cheaper than just buying 2x8GB at the start (if you don't want to upgrade later) since even at a premium that's cheaper than 1x32GB.

        It's also not going be cheaper than buying 1x16GB at the start then adding another (cheaper) 16GB stick in the future, since you're paying the high price price of the initial 1x32GB stick while it's expensive (vs only paying for 1x16GB while it's expensive).

        Using flex mode (or whatever AMD's equivalent naming for it is) in this case only seems like a good solution if you either:

        1. Don't care about hitting the worse performance of the single-channel memory - in which case flex mode is not strictly relevant because your concern is purely capacity, not performance; even if all you got was a perpetual single-channel configuration and flex wasn't supported, you wouldn't care.
        2. Won't exceed the smaller dual-channel subset of memory - in which case you've paid out the wazoo for an extra 24GB of single-channel memory which you think you won't even use (which seems like a terrible idea to me personally).
  • +2

    Just be aware, Nebula posts good deals here, takes up more orders than they can handle. Ends up with a very very long delivery time. Last time, it took a month for them to say eta is not still available. Not so good with communication or customer support.

    • That is correct for the bulk of the orders during the busy time at the end of last year. The combination of the busy period and the fear of price hikes really just slammed us. We've made adjustments to operations and customer service. The current ETA for despatch is accuarate and customer service has improved. We are meeting all of our current service level agreements now.

      I apologise for your experience recently, it will be a thing of the past and only improve from here.

  • +1

    5060 8gb, nah.. at least offer the RX 9060 16gb ($540odd a few days ago at centrecom, I'm sure you could get close to that price. 16gb will be the min. to decently run new AAA titles soon enough)

    • Good feedback, this is definitely the general consensus to run AAA titles these days. Will take it into strong consideration.

    • +1

      I've added the Sapphire AMD Radeon RX 9060 XT Pulse OC - 16GB as an upgrade option for this deal :).

  • any deal with 5090?

    • Impossible with current pricing and shortage, it would be best to DIY.

  • I bought a very similar spec pc from centre com with a 4060Ti (same performance as 5060) and an Ryzen 5 8400F 2 months ago during the ram crisis for $250 less

    • 😁

Login or Join to leave a comment