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I tried to build a high-end AMD gaming PC out of Cyber Monday deals but RAM prices make prebuilts better value for money

I tried to build a high-end AMD gaming PC out of Cyber Monday deals but RAM prices make prebuilts better value for money

I’m a big advocate for building your own PC. It’s fun, you learn a lot and you can often save some money doing it yourself. I’ve built heaps of gaming PCs over the course of this year, and I’m usually pretty confident in beating a prebuilt for part selection and performance with the right deals.

There are plenty of deals on PC parts today. If you’re upgrading your existing PC, there are many deals worth looking into. However, building one from scratch is becoming a bit of a nightmare due to extremely inflated RAM prices, and to some degree, SSDs too.

In fact, RAM might’ve killed my dreams of building a desirable AMD gaming PC with only products on offer this weekend. I started out pretty confident, choosing the discounted RX 9070 16 GB as a basis to build out the rest of the rig. I wanted to build a high-end PC here, one I would want myself, not just use the cheapest parts. The last-gen but good value for money Ryzen 7 7800X3D followed, with a cheaper than usual X870 motherboard to go with it.

The case, cooler and PSU are all heavily discounted too. In fact, the MasterLiquid Core II is a stellar pick at only $65, as it’s one of the best value coolers I’ve tested all year.

But alas, when I reached the RAM and SSD, everything changed for the worse.

We’ve been writing about RAM prices exploding these past few months, and so it comes as no surprise that they’re bad, but it is a surprise just how bad they’ve gotten over the past few days.

From a couple hundred bucks for a 32 GB kit to upwards of $400 in some cases. I’d never recommend anything of the sort, but even my best efforts only came up with a DDR5-6000 kit rated to CL36 for $300. Not ideal.

You can grab slower kits for less, but not so much less to make them desirable. I’d even consider buying a cheaper 16 GB kit and just living with that for a year in hopes that RAM prices come down enough to buy 32 GB at some point in the future.

A Corsair Frame 4000D case with various features designed for both Corsair's own iCUE ecosystem and for the benefit of system builders.

A previous build of mine in the Corsair Frame 4000D. (Image credit: Future)

Similar, the best SSD deals have seemingly started to dry up now. I’ve managed to find one good PCIe 5.0 SSD from Samsung that’s still on offer. It’s not super-cheap, but it’s one of the fastest around.

That’s the thing, you could buy much more affordable parts, but you’d be getting a different level of performance out of your PC. And what I’ve found from picking these parts out is that the total for this build ($1,835) is a lot more than a prebuilt PC with similar, if not better, parts.

You can score a prebuilt with an RX 9070 XT and 32 GB of RAM for $1,650 right now. The SSD might not be as good, nor the motherboard, and I have more faith in the case, PSU and cooling I’ve chosen, but it even improves upon the CPU with the more modern Ryzen 7 9800X3D. Even if I picked a cheaper motherboard, cooler, case and SSD, I’m still not saving anywhere near enough to make the build worthwhile.

So, it’s a bit depressing out there for PC building. Thanks, AI. I’ll drop my build below and links to some decent alternative gaming PCs for your consideration in these dire times.

The build

The parts

Prebuilt PCs

(Image credit: Future)

Best PC build 2025

link

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