5090 Prebuilt Deal Details
A current PC deal bundles an RTX 5090 inside a prebuilt aimed at 4K gamers and includes 64GB of DDR5 RAM plus a 2TB NVMe SSD, suggesting the easiest route into 5090 performance may be a full‑system purchase. PC Guide highlights this configuration as a packaged option rather than hunting for the GPU alone. (pcguide.com)
A discounted Xidax desktop is offering one of the clearest ways to buy an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 right now: inside a full prebuilt system. (pcguide.com) PC Guide said on April 13, 2026 that the Xidax X6 Onami Black includes an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090, an Advanced Micro Devices Ryzen 7 9800X3D processor, 64 gigabytes of Double Data Rate 5 memory, and 2 terabytes of Non-Volatile Memory Express storage. The article said the deal was $688 off at publication. (pcguide.com) The same listing also points to a 360 millimeter all-in-one liquid cooler and a 1,000 watt power supply, parts that matter in a machine built around a top-end graphics card. PC Guide described the tower as aimed at 4K gaming rather than a lower-cost, mixed-use build. (pcguide.com) A prebuilt matters here because the GeForce RTX 5090 sits at the top of Nvidia’s current GeForce lineup, with 32 gigabytes of Graphics Double Data Rate 7 memory and a listed starting price of $1,999 for the card alone. Nvidia markets it for 4K gaming, ray tracing, and artificial-intelligence-assisted features such as Deep Learning Super Sampling 4.5. (nvidia.com) That makes full-system pricing part of the story. Current retail listings for other GeForce RTX 5090 prebuilts commonly run from about $5,299.99 to $6,100, with configurations from Skytech, Gigabyte Aorus, and AVGPC pairing the card with 2 terabytes of storage and 32 to 64 gigabytes of Double Data Rate 5 memory. (newegg.com) The processor choice is also deliberate. PC Guide said the machine uses the Ryzen 7 9800X3D, and described that chip as a gaming-first part because of its extra cache, which is on-chip memory that helps feed game data quickly to the processor. (pcguide.com) The tradeoff is price and flexibility. Buyers who build their own systems can choose a different case, motherboard, storage mix, or cooling setup, while prebuilt buyers are paying for assembly, support, and the convenience of getting a ready-to-run machine in one order. (newegg.com) For shoppers chasing GeForce RTX 5090 performance in April 2026, the market is increasingly treating the graphics card as part of a $5,000-plus package, not a casual component upgrade. (nvidia.com)