Whole 5090 PC steal
Dell’s Alienware Area‑51 with RTX 5090, Ryzen 7 9800X3D, 32GB DDR5 and 1TB SSD dropped below $4,450 — about $1,200 cheaper than buying a 5090 alone and assembling the rest. Quiet, upgradable, and tuned for 4K performance, it’s a solid prebuilt value if you want top‑end GPU power without hunting parts ( ).
Dell markets the Area‑51 using order codes AAT2265 and AAT2250 on its online store, where multiple Ryzen‑ and Intel‑based configurations are listed. (dell.com) Dell’s Area‑51 configurator shows flagship options that include up to a 360mm all‑in‑one liquid CPU cooler and a 1,500W 80Plus Platinum power supply to support high‑power GPUs and future upgrades. (ign.com) Nvidia set the GeForce RTX 5090’s official MSRP at $1,999, and major outlets reported the card returning to MSRP availability at U.S. retailers after earlier scarcity. (techspot.com) At launch and in early resale markets some 5090 cards were listed for well over $6,000 on secondary sites before prices normalized and retailer stock improved. (pcguide.com) Hardware coverage highlights the 5090’s technical heft — roughly 21,760 CUDA cores and 32GB of GDDR7 — metrics that reviewers use to justify its flagship positioning. (tomshardware.com) Multiple deal roundups and retailer comparisons show other prebuilt systems with RTX 5090 configurations often priced above $5,000, a context analysts used when flagging Dell’s recent price moves as notably aggressive. (sea.ign.com)