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A gaming PC in the process of being built, using Radeon and Ryzen components and an Asus Pro Art PA401 PC case.

(Image credit: Future)

Image 2 of 6

A gaming PC in the process of being built, using Radeon and Ryzen components and an Asus Pro Art PA401 PC case.

(Image credit: Future)

Image 3 of 6

A gaming PC in the process of being built, using Radeon and Ryzen components and an Asus Pro Art PA401 PC case.

(Image credit: Future)

Image 4 of 6

A gaming PC in the process of being built, using Radeon and Ryzen components and an Asus Pro Art PA401 PC case.

(Image credit: Future)

Image 5 of 6

A gaming PC in the process of being built, using Radeon and Ryzen components and an Asus Pro Art PA401 PC case.

(Image credit: Future)

Image 6 of 6

A gaming PC in the process of being built, using Radeon and Ryzen components and an Asus Pro Art PA401 PC case.

(Image credit: Future)

Sometimes less is more, and this PC build epitomises that concept. I can’t claim all the credit; the Asus ProArt PA401 is a gem. The wood finish down the front panels, the all-black interior, and the clever switches that make it a breeze are all to thank for that. Now I do realise the irony of saying less is more and placing two sticks of G.Skill’s finest gold-plated, faux-crystal RAM sticks in there, but they don’t look anything near as garish as they sound.

This is an all-AMD gaming PC; my slight obsession with using the Ryzen 7 9800X3D in full force here. It’s a powerful gaming chip for a reasonable price—3D V-Cache working a treat for improving frame rates. If you wanted to improve further, you could opt for the 16 cores of the Ryzen 9 9950X3D, but you’ll pay a tall fee for that. No, the 9800X3D works great here, and most of all in combination with the Asus Prime 9070 XT I’ve selected to go with it.

Get the build: $2,168 | £2,018

Asus ProArt caseChassisAsus ProArt Case PA401 Wood Edition

Sticking a wooden panel on a chassis is a common occurrence these days, and I’m all here for it. Though Asus somehow makes it look even more tasteful than normal. The PA401 also has a few satisfying switches hidden in plain sight, to control fan speeds, open panels, and prevent accidental power offs. Oh, and two big front-facing fans are included here. You can read our PA401 review for more.

US: $140 | UK: £120

Gigabyte X870e Aorus Pro Amd Am5 Lga 1718 Motherboard, Atx, Ddr5, 4x M.2, Pcie 5.0, Usb4, Wifi7, 2.5gbe Lan, Ez-Latch, 5-Year WarrantyMotherboardGigabyte X870E Aorus Pro

Only the best for this machine: we’re going for the X870E chipset, which offers massive connectivity and keeps AMD’s top gaming chip in check. Read our X870E Aorus Pro review for more.

US: $280 | UK: £317

Asus Prime-Rx9070xt-O16g Prime Radeon Rx 9070 Xt Oc Edition Graphics Card ,pcie 5.0, Hdmi/dp 2.1, 2.5-Slot DesignGraphics cardAsus Prime RX 9070 XT 16 GB

AMD finally has a hit on its hands in the RX 9070 XT. It’s competitive with the RTX 5070 Ti, and, most of the time, cheaper too. Not necessarily this particular model, though. Read our Asus Prime RX 9070 XT review for more.

US: $710 | UK: £595

AMD CPU boxCPUAMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D

AMD has paired up with the manufacturing might of TSMC to stack more L3 cache beneath the CPU cores on the 9800X3D. It makes for a much faster gaming chip. Read our Ryzen 7 9800X3D review for more.

US: $477 | UK: £400

G.skill Trident Z5 Royal Neo Series Ddr5 Ram (amd Expo) 32gb (2x16gb) 6000mt/s Cl28-36-36-96 1.40v Desktop Computer Memory U-Dimm - Gold (f5-6000j2836g16gx2-Tr5ng)RAMG.Skill Trident Z5 Royal Neo Series DDR5-6000 32 GB

Did I say less is more? On the surface, these sticks don’t really fit that ethos, but honestly they’re rapid, low-latency and blend in better than you think.

US: $210 | UK: £210

Crucial P510 2tb Gen5 Nvme Ssd, Up to 10,000 Mb/s, Pcie 5.0 M.2 2280 Ssd, Internal Solid State Drive, Compatible With Laptop, Desktop, +acronis Software - Ct2000p510ssd8-01SSDCrucial P510 2 TB

PCIe 5.0 SSDs are finally reaching critical mass and now affordable enough to make them worth it sometimes. I’ve swapped to this Crucial P510 from the Biwin Black Opal X570, as tested below, as the Biwin isn’t yet available in the US. The P510 is a top replacement, however. Read our P510 review for more.

US: $132 | UK: £150

Corsair PSUPSUCorsair RM850x

Modular, plenty of connections, and neat cables. My only complaint with Corsair’s unit is the darn cable combs I have to install myself—WHY?

US: $130 | UK: £131

Asus Prime Lc 240 Argb All-In-One Aio Cpu Liquid Cooler Amd: Am5 & Am4 Intel: Lga 1851, 1700, 1200, 115x Specially Designed Cpu Contact Area, Finned Channels, Infinity Mirror, Pre-Installed Argb FansCoolerAsus Prime LC 240

The PA401 chassis is limited on headroom, so the Asus Prime LC 240 ARGB is about as big as I can go. I’m a fan of the RGB lighting and it’s easy to install, though.

US: $89 | UK: £95

Performance

⬇️ Click to load benchmark data ⬇️

We put every build through its paces, testing the latest games and putting the CPU under pressure to ensure stability.

This PC is ‘Custom PC #12’ in the charts below.


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