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After 20 years in the business and too many Prime Days to mention these are my favorite Big Deal Days PC gaming deals
I'm picking my absolute favorite Prime Day deals from across Amazon, Newegg, Best Buy, Walmart, B&H and the rest.
1. Quick links
2. Top deals
3. My picks (LIVE)
Here is your aperitif for Black Friday, as if you needed your appetite whetting, right? Yes, it's October's now-regular Prime Day event from Amazon stretching out the deals season. Yes, it's called Big Deal Days, and yes, it's a dreadful name, and yes we're going to keep calling it Prime Day, too.
👉All the Prime Day deals on Amazon👈
All the other retailers are joining in the October fun as well, launching competing, complementary sales events to join up with Amazon's mainly member-only discounts. There are already excellent deals live now, with Newegg's Fantastech Sale II live now, and I'm not 100% convinced we're going to see massive changes in pricing over the next few days or even the week, so I'm pulling together all the deals I'm into right now.
I've been a tech journalist for two decades now and have hit a ton of Black Friday and Prime Day events during that time. So, I've got a pretty good idea of what a good deal looks like and what genuinely great PC gaming hardware is. As a team we're bringing you all the best Prime Day PC gaming deals but I wanted to highlight my personal favorite PC goodies right here and I'll be regularly updating this page over the next few days and you can see that in the live section below.
From the best Prime Day laptop bargains, full systems, OLED monitors, CPUs, GPUs, SSDs, or peripherals, I've tested a ton of them in my time, and I want to show you that you don't have to spend an absolute fortune on your PC setup to get a great gaming experience.
Quick links
- Amazon - All the Big Deal Days energy
- Newegg - October Fantastech Sale II (?)
- Dell - Discounts on Alienware PCs, laptops, and 240Hz gaming monitors
- Gamestop - Up to 50% off Razer and Logitech peripherals
- iBuyPower - Up to $500 off fast-shipping gaming PCs
- Walmart - Up to $500 discounts on gaming laptops and PCs
- B&H Photo - Save over $200 on gaming laptops and big discounts on storage
- Best Buy - Save up to $200 on gaming monitors, and more on gaming laptops
- Target - A wide range of deals on tech and peripherals
- Staples - Save on Lenovo, Asus and HP laptops and gaming monitors
- Lenovo - Save up to 34% on gaming laptops and PCs with Black Friday in July
- Razer - Discounts on some of our favorite gaming laptops, mice, and gaming headsets
- HP - Save up to $850 on RTX 40-series gaming PCs
- Corsair - Deals on a range of gaming PCs
Nvidia GeForce-powered gaming PCs
- RTX 4060 - Yeyian Yumi | $800 @ Newegg
- RTX 4060 Ti - Yeyian Tanto | $1,000 @ Newegg
- RTX 4070 - ABS Cyclone Aqua | $1,160 @ Newegg
- RTX 4070 Super - Skytech Blaze Mini | $1,250 @ Newegg
- RTX 4070 Ti Super - Lenovo Legion Tower 5 | $1,600 @ Newegg
- RTX 4080 Super - ABS Vortex-X Ruby | $2,000 @ Amazon
- RTX 4090 - ABS Kaze Aqua| $3,000 @ Newegg
AMD Radeon-powered gaming PCs
- RX 7800 XT - Skytech Azure | $1,250 @ Newegg
- RX 7900 GRE - CyberPowerPC Gamer Supreme | $1,650 @ Best Buy
- RX 7900 XTX - Yeyian gaming PC| $,2,179 @ Amazon
Gaming laptops
- RTX 4050 - HP Victus | $599 @ Walmart
- RTX 4060 - Dell G15 | $850 @ Dell
- RTX 4070 - Dell G16 | $1,300 @ Dell
- RTX 4080 - Acer Predator Helios 16 | $1,840 @ Best Buy
Amazon Prime Day top deals
1. Dell G15 | Ryzen 7 7840HS | RTX 4060 | 15-inch | 165 Hz | 1080p | 16 GB DDR5-4800 | 512 GB SSD | $1,099.99 $849.99 at Dell (save $250)
Dell is kinda slaying it around Prime Day this year, both on desktop and with laptops like this here cheapest decent RTX 4060 gaming laptop we've seen so far. My only concern with it is the 512 GB SSD being pretty miserly, otherwise the spec makes for an excellent budget gaming laptop that will absolutely deliver on the 165 Hz 1080p screen it comes with.
2. Lenovo Legion Tower 5 Gen 8 | Ryzen 7 7700 | RTX 4070 Ti Super | 32 GB DDR5 | 1 TB SSD | $1,599.99 at Newegg
The listing on Newegg is oddly sparse in the specs department, but it is shipping directly from Lenovo, and the main Legion 5 listing on its own site is oddly specs starved, too. Still, the core spec speaks for itself with an excellent eight-core Zen 4 CPU at its heart ably propping up that RTX 4070 Ti Super GPU. You also get a full 32 GB of DDR5 memory, twice that of the Alienware.
3. Dell G16 | RTX 4070 | Intel Core i9 13900HX | 16-inch | 240 Hz | 1600p | 1 TB SSD | 16 GB DDR5 4800 | $1949.99 $1,299.99 at Dell (save $650)
With a blazingly fast 240 Hz 1600p display and Intel's super-powered Core i9 13900HX, this Dell gaming lappy has quite the spec sheet. You get a proper 140 W RTX 4070 as well—although it must be said that it's not the prettiest machine, nor the most compact. Still, it should deliver some proper mobile gaming firepower for a surprisingly small amount of cash. Though you will need to upgrade the single channel memory, but you can pick up a dual-channel 32 GB kit for just $73 right now.
4. Asus TUF A16 | Ryzen 7 7735HS | Radeon RX 7700S | 16-inch | 1200p | 165 Hz | 16 GB DDR5-4800 | 512 GB SSD | $1,099.99 $699.99 at Best Buy (save $400)
If it wasn't for the 512 GB SSD being a bit small, I would have nothing negative to say about this budget gaming laptop. At just $700 it's a great price for a machine that will generally outperform an RTX 4060-based laptop. But that miserly storage isn't much of an issue as there's a second M.2 slot inside for you to add a second SSD and instantly bump up the game-holding capacity. The Ryzen CPU is an eight-core, 16-thread job, and the Radeon chip may not cope too well with ray traced games, but then neither does an RTX 4060 even with DLSS as a crutch.
5. Yeyian Yumi | Ryzen 5 5600X | Nvidia RTX 4060 | 16 GB DDR4-3200 | 1 TB SSD | $1,199 $799.99 at Newegg (save $399.01)
The Yumi is a bit of a classic when it comes to gaming PC deals, as it's always there or thereabouts. At the moment this is the cheapest RTX 4060-based PC we've found, and comes with a supporting spec that is absolutely solid, even if it's not the latest and greatest. The combination of DDR4 RAM and a previous-gen Ryzen 5 might not be top-end, but this machine will still deliver great performance for under a grand.
6. XFX RX 7800 XT | 16 GB GDDR6 | 3,840 shaders | 2,430 MHz boost | $489.99 $429.99 at Newegg (save $60)
At this price point, the best card used to be the RX 6800 XT but these days we have deals like this one, where the newer 7800 XT has the same price tag. It's only a little bit faster than the card it's replaced, and admittedly it's not a huge discount, but you're still getting a lotta GPU for the money.
RX 7800 XT price check: Amazon $469.99 | Walmart $469.99 | Best Buy $489.99
7. ASRock Phantom PG27Q15R2A | 27-inch | 165Hz | 1440p | VA | FreeSync Premium | $239.99 $156.99 at Newegg (save $83.22)
ASRock's gaming monitors are always so darned cheap—we love them for that. This 1440p panel offers resolution and a rapid refresh rate for a potent PC gaming combo, though the built-in Wi-Fi antenna helps it stand out from the crowd. That's hardly essential, but could come in use for some.
Price check: Amazon $229
8. Lexar NM790| 1 TB | NVMe | PCIe 4.0 | 7,400 MB/s read | 6,500 MB/s write | $99.99 $74.99 at Amazon (save $25)
For anyone looking for a cheap, spacious drive with serious performance, here you're getting a genuinely brilliant SSD for the money, and you can see this for yourself with our review of the 4 TB version.
Price check: Newegg $90.75
9. Corsair TC 100 Relaxed gaming chair | Fabric | Black | Lumbar pillow | 2D armrests | $249.99 $199.99 at Newegg (save $50 with code FTT224DX7248)
This is my pick for the best budget gaming chair. It's a comfortable throne on which to snap headshots in Valorant or romance Gale in Baldur's Gate 3. The important bits are: it's comfortable, pretty easy to put together, and surprisingly plush for the money. It's also available in a black leatherette.
Price check: Amazon $219.99 | Corsair $219.99
10. MSI MAG 321UP | 32-inch | 165 Hz | QD-OLED | $829.99 $759.99 at Amazon (save $70)
What a difference a letter makes... especially when it comes to gaming monitors. The code names give to monitors are often impenetrable, but the difference between this MAG 321UP and the MAG321UPX is the this one has a 165 Hz refresh instead of 240 Hz. That's the only difference between this and more expensive OLED, otherwise you're still getting a gorgeous 4K panel, with response times to die for, and pixel quality, I dunno, to live for? If you're not concerned about the refresh rate difference (and do you have the hardware to hit a matching 240 fps otherwise?) then this is where the smart OLED money is spent.
Price check: Newegg $759.99
LIVE: Latest Updates
Well, hi there. Dave here, editor-in-chief on the hardware side of PC Gamer, so let me take you by the hand and lead you through the morass of PC gaming deals over the next few days.
I'm going to be running the rule over all the potential options in a whole host of different categories, and I've already picked a few goodies out that I think are great deals right now. So, stay tuned here for my top recommendations.
ASRock Phantom PG27Q15R2A | 27-inch | 165 Hz | 1440p | VA | FreeSync Premium | $239.99 $156.99 at Newegg (save $83.22)
ASRock's gaming monitors are always so darned cheap—we love them for that. This 1440p panel offers resolution and a rapid refresh rate for a potent PC gaming combo, though the built-in Wi-Fi antenna helps it stand out from the crowd. That's hardly essential, but could come in use for some.
Price check: Amazon $229
This is exactly what I mean when I say that it doesn't need to cost an absolute fortune to create a great gaming setup, and gaming monitors is the perfect case in point. A lot of the talk right now is about the rise of OLED gaming monitors, and sure, they do look stunning, but for a genuinely good one you're still looking at near $800 at best.
But this 27-inch ASRock is just $157 and offers 2560 x 1440 as the native resolution, with a 165 Hz refresh. For $157. That sort of spec would have been around double that this time last year, which is pretty ludicrous. It's not some dim wee panel, either, this is a bona fide 550 nits display which will deliver a surprisingly good HDR experience, too.
Dell G16 | RTX 4070 | Intel Core i9 13900HX | 16-inch | 240 Hz | 1600p | 1 TB SSD | 16 GB DDR5 4800 | $1949.99 $1,299.99 at Dell (save $650)
With a blazingly fast 240 Hz 1600p display and Intel's super-powered Core i9 13900HX, this Dell gaming lappy has quite the spec sheet. You get a proper 140 W RTX 4070 as well—although it must be said that it's not the prettiest machine, nor the most compact. Still, it should deliver some proper mobile gaming firepower for a surprisingly small amount of cash. Though you will need to upgrade the single channel memory, but you can pick up a dual-channel 32 GB kit for just $73 right now.
But if you are looking to get yourself a whole new system to replace your existing gaming PC then there are some great options available already. This $1,300 Dell G16 is a great price for an RTX 4070 gaming laptop, and offers a ton of tech for the money.
Obviously, you get the RTX 4070 GPU itself, offering gaming performance along the same lines as the RTX 3080 from the last generation, but alongside that you have the Core i9 13900HX CPU. That's a 24-core, 32-thread chip that's great for multi-threaded creativity performance as well as with enough single-threaded grunt for gaming, too.
One thing to note, however, is that while 16 GB DDR5-4800 is an okay amount of memory for a gaming laptop, it's notably just a single stick in this build. That will offer half the memory bandwidth of a dual-channel setup, which is a shame. But it's also worth noting that it's an easy upgrade, and 32 GB DDR5-4800 in two sticks will cost just $73.
With all those internal gubbins, you also get a lovely 1600p 240 Hz display, too. So yeah, lots of good things, in actually quite a large package.
Alienware Aurora R16 Gaming Desktop | Core i7 14700F | RTX 4070 Ti Super | 16 GB DDR5-5600 | 1 TB SSD | $2,099.99 $1,499.99 at Dell (save $600)
We recommend buying an Alienware PC only once it's on offer, and this is certainly an offer, as it's now cheaper than many RTX 4070 Super rigs, let alone 4070 Ti Super ones. The Aurora R16 features a powerful high-end Nvidia GPU alongside a quality Intel chip and a decent PSU. Unfortunately, it's made up of proprietary parts and only has 16 GB of DDR5 RAM, which is a bit on the slower side at 5,600 MT/s.
It actually feels weird to be kicking off talk of deals and be leading with a pair of Dell/Alienware systems. Though, to be fair, we do say you should always wait for a big discount before pulling the trigger on an Alienware gaming PC, so this excellent discount on the Aurora R16 really does stand out.
This is the sort of price you could realistically expect to see around an RTX 4070 PC, so the fact that you're getting a full RTX 4070 Ti Super system for $1,500 is excellent stuff. Yes, Alienware rigs have proprietary parts inside them, but when the discount is this healthy I can happily overlook that here. After all, you're getting a 1 KW PSU, so you shouldn't have to replace that anytime soon, either.
I'm kinda disappointed, as a PC gamer of late '90s and early 2000s, that Alienware machines look very much like pretty standard Dell PCs. They're just boxes now, so no more shiny curvy Giger-ish chassis from Alienware, though sadly still with proprietary parts inside.
Still, good deal, eh?
Mountain Everest 60 | Mechanical | 60% | RGB LED backlight | Hot-swappable switches | $69.99 $49.99 at Amazon (save $20)
The Everest 60 has a fantastic feel under the fingers and can also form the base for all your expandable keyboard desires. A hot-swappable switch base means you can swap out its switches until your heart's content, and it has silicone and foam dampening, great stabilizers, RGB lighting, thick PBT keycaps, and pre-lubed switches. The whole shebang, for those looking to hear that glorious "thock". All for $50. Just remember this is a 60% keyboard, so you don't get many extra keys such as Ins or PgUp/PgDn.
Price check: Newegg $74.99
This is my boi. I genuinely love this keyboard and it's my daily driver in home setup. It's the best compact gaming keyboard I've ever used, and the Mountain-own keyboard switches feel great. I was going to remove all the ones that came in my own unit with a set of Halo True switches from an older board of mine, but the typing experience is already so good I've never felt the need to do it.
At the full price I was already into this board, but now it's just $50 for a full, dampened mechanical 60% keyboard, that has hot swappable switches, it's an outstanding deal.
It's an absolutely brilliant keyboard for a genuinely stellar price.
Corsair TC100 Relaxed | Fabric | $237.17 $219.99 at Amazon (save $17.18)
I know it's not the greatest discount ever but, as one of the best gaming chairs that's already a great buy at full price, it's well worth a look. Especially when you consider you're getting a super comfortable gaming chair with space to sit cross-legged, and one that doesn't have a silly go-faster stripe racing aesthetic.
Price check: Newegg $219.99 | Corsair $219.99
Gaming chairs are super expensive, right? Well, yeah, they really are. If you want the best gaming chair, like the Secretlab beast, you're going to be spending well over $500 on that. But what if there was another way? What if you could buy an outstanding Corsair TC100 Relaxed gaming chair for $220?
That's where we are here: a really beautifully finished chair, that is super-comfortable and oozes quality, while it doesn't require you to take out a second mortgage just for the privilege of somewhere to park your butt.
XFX RX 7800 XT | 16 GB GDDR6 | 3,840 shaders | 2,430 MHz boost | $489.99 $429.99 at Newegg (save $60)
At this price point, the best card used to be the RX 6800 XT but these days we have deals like this one, where the newer 7800 XT has the same price tag. It's only a little bit faster than the card it's replaced, and admittedly it's not a huge discount, but you're still getting a lotta GPU for the money.
RX 7800 XT price check: Amazon $469.99 | Walmart $469.99 | Best Buy $489.99
I was a big fan of the AMD RX 7800 XT when it first came out. For its $500 sticker price it was delivering the sort of gaming performance that you would have had to pay $650 - $700 for in the previous generation. That, admittedly, is the sort of generational improvement you want, nay, expect, to see but still given some of the pricing shenanigans of the green team in the RTX 40-series it's not a given.
Now, with the Prime Day/Big Deal Days pricing pressure we're seeing a healthy chunk chopped off the price of our favorite mid-range graphics card, making it just $430 at Newegg.
That's a full $100 cheaper than the cheapest RTX 4070 GPU we've found for sale, but with broadly similar straight gaming performance. Of course, if you're into ray-tracing heavy games, such as Cyberpunk 2077 et al, then the RTX 4070 will deliver higher shiny frame rates, but for standard rasterized gaming performance the RX 7800 XT has it down.
Lexar NM790| 1 TB | NVMe | PCIe 4.0 | 7,400 MB/s read | 6,500 MB/s write | $99.99 $74.99 at Amazon (save $25)
For anyone looking for a cheap, spacious drive offering serious performance, here you're getting a genuinely brilliant SSD for the money, and you can see this for yourself with our review of the 4 TB version.
Price check: Newegg $90.75
For anyone sitting on a laptop with just a 512 GB SSD inside it, and an endless merry-go-round of game library installing and uninstalling to get your games to fit, here's an affordable solution: a capacious, speedy 1 TB SSD.
At $75 from Amazon you're looking at top-end PCIe 4.0 SSD speeds and enough storage to hold a whole bunch of your currently played games. Of course, you could spend a little more for a slightly slower 2 TB drive, such as the Team Group MP44L, if you can spare another $30 for your upgrade budget.
Yes, it's a little slower, but you're arguably never going to notice that performance delta, not when you have twice as much space...
Team Group MP44L | 2 TB | NVMe | PCIe 4.0 | 4,800 MB/s read | 4,400 MB/s write | $139.99 $105.99 at Newegg (save $34.00)
There's no DRAM to boost sustained performance and the SLC cache isn't especially big, either. But the speed is good enough for most workloads and when 1 TB of storage costs this much, who cares that it's not flash or fancy? Not us, that's for sure.
Price check: Amazon $105.99
MORNING! Well, it's actually actual Prime Day Big Deal Days todays, and so there's going to be some members only deals popping up across Amazon over the next 48 hours, but all the other retailers are in the game, too, so there will be goodies worth grabbing even if you're not in the Bezos crew.
Dell G15 | Ryzen 7 7840HS | RTX 4060 | 15-inch | 165 Hz | 1080p | 16 GB DDR5-4800 | 512 GB SSD | $1,099.99 $849.99 at Dell (save $250)
Dell is kinda slaying it around Prime Day this year, both on desktop and with laptops like this here cheapest decent RTX 4060 gaming laptop we've seen so far. My only concern with it is the 512 GB SSD being pretty miserly, otherwise the spec makes for an excellent budget gaming laptop that will absolutely deliver on the 165 Hz 1080p screen it comes with.
I'm going to be honest, I did not expect Dell to be the one propping up Prime Day with the best gaming PC and laptop deals, but here we are. Not only have we seen an RTX 4070 Ti Super Alienware desktop rig on offer for the cheapest price we've seen, but Dell's also got a $1,300 RTX 4070 laptop doing the rounds, too.
And now it's also shipping the cheapest RTX 4060 gaming laptop I've spied today. The Dell G15 is a bit of a classic around sales times, regularly getting discounted, but rarely to a point where it's the go-to deal. That smol 512 GB SSD is my only real problem with the spec as that's pretty tiny for today's bloated game installs.
But the G15 is easily opened, and swapping the main drive is only a pain in that you'll have to either clone the existing SSD or start with a fresh Windows install.
Otherwise you're getting a great budget lappy, with plenty of RAM, a decent 165 Hz 1080p screen, and a Ryzen CPU packing one of the best integrated GPUs if you wanted to shut down the RTX 4060 when you're on the road to boost its battery life.
Dough Spectrum One | Glossy | 27 inch | 4K | 144Hz | IPS | FreeSync Premium Pro | G-Sync compatible | $474.98 $375.99 at Amazon (save $98.99 with Prime membership)
First thing to say about this screen is that you don't get a stand as standard, so to speak. You have to spend another $100 if you don't already have a VESA compatible monitor arm you use. It's also worth stating there have been issues with Dough (previously known as Eve) fulfilling orders itself. This deal is specifically via Amazon, though, so you know the stock is in hand and ready to go. The final thing to say is that this monitor is excellent, and I'm a huge fan. It's not quite as glorious as the Gorilla glass version, with its lovely panel coating, but it's still a great glossy 4K screen. It was also an expensive screen when it first came out, and is actually a surprisingly good HDR panel with its DisplayHDR 600 rating and ability to hit up to 750 nits peak.
I love a glossy gaming monitor. Most of the time I'm not gaming in a brightly lit office, so I don't need an anti-glare coating robbing my display of contrast. Which is why I love the Dough Spectrum One glossy screens. I've got one hovering on my desktop right now, and it's a stunning 4K IPS panel, with vibrant colors and actually pretty damned good HDR performance.
It's only rated to DisplayHDR 600, but is capable of beyond 700 nits in terms of peak luminance. The backlighting zones admittedly are pretty limited, but in games you're only going to really see a sharp, HDR image that pops.
Now, I know there are historical issues with Dough née Eve monitors, and the way it's handled past mistakes has not covered the company in glory. But you can at least be confident here that buying from Amazon that you actually will get the screen you've paid for.
One other thing to note is that you don't get a monitor stand with the screen, you have to get that separately for another $100 if you don't go for a monitor arm. But if you already have a VESA compatible monitor arm then you're set.
MSI MAG 321UP | 32-inch | 165 Hz | QD-OLED | $829.99 $759.99 at Amazon (save $70)
What a difference a letter makes... especially when it comes to gaming monitors. The code names give to monitors are often impenetrable, but the difference between this MAG 321UP and the MAG321UPX is the this one has a 165 Hz refresh instead of 240 Hz. That's the only difference between this and more expensive OLED, otherwise you're still getting a gorgeous 4K panel, with response times to die for, and pixel quality, I dunno, to live for? If you're not concerned about the refresh rate difference (and do you have the hardware to hit a matching 240 fps otherwise?) then this is where the smart OLED money is spent.
Price check: Newegg $759.99
If you want the best gaming monitor tech right now then it's got to be OLED. Sure, there are concerns around full-screen brightness, and a lingering low-level panic over burn-in, but if you want vibrant colors, unbelieveable contrast levels, unprecedented response times, then OLED is the only way.
I'm tapping away staring at a 32-inch 4K OLED using the same QD-OLED panel as this right now. It is the way.
And, while the best OLED gaming monitors can be prohibitively prices in the $1,000+ region, MSI has been working away to bring the price down. This MAG 321UP is the result of some slight cuts to the feature set which means you can now get a 32-inch 4K OLED for just $760—that's the cheapest I've ever seen an OLED gaming monitor I would actually want.
It's done away with a USB Type-C connection offering 90 W of power delivery the top MSI model has, and it's down-shifted the panel to a maximum of 165 Hz in terms of the refresh rate, but that is still plenty fast. And chances are you're going to struggle to match the pricier screens' 240 Hz refresh with your 4K frame rates anyways.
It's a great price for a great screen.
😳 Oh no, that bargain Alienware Aurora R16 with the RTX 4070 Ti Super in it is...
Luckily this one isn't out of stock - it's a Lenovo Legion gaming PC, so another reliable brand, but this time with none of the proprietary parts shenanigans that Dell pulls with its Alienware machines. That makes it a lot easier—and cheaper—when it comes to upgrading down the line.
Lenovo Legion Tower 5 Gen 8 | Ryzen 7 7700 | RTX 4070 Ti Super | 32 GB DDR5 | 1 TB SSD | $1,599.99 at Newegg
The listing on Newegg is oddly sparse in the specs department, but it is shipping directly from Lenovo, and the main Legion 5 listing on its own site is oddly specs starved, too. Still, the core spec speaks for itself with an excellent eight-core Zen 4 CPU at its heart ably propping up that RTX 4070 Ti Super GPU. You also get a full 32 GB of DDR5 memory, twice that of the Alienware.
It's also actually a better spec, too. You don't have to mess around looking for more memory, because this comes with a full 32 GB of the stuff, and a powerful eight-core, 16-thread AMD Zen 4 chip at its heart. It may be a last-gen chip now, but it's got more than enough about it to keep that hungry RTX 4070 Ti Super fed and makes for an outstanding gaming PC for the money.
Corsair TC 100 Relaxed gaming chair | Fabric | Black | Lumbar pillow | 2D armrests | $249.99 $199.99 at Newegg (save $50 with code FTT224DX7248)
This is my pick for the best budget gaming chair. It's a comfortable throne on which to snap headshots in Valorant or romance Gale in Baldur's Gate 3. The important bits are: it's comfortable, pretty easy to put together, and surprisingly plush for the money. It's also available in a black leatherette.
Price check: Amazon $219.99 | Corsair $219.99
And now it's even cheaper! Already our favorite budget gaming chair, and it already had a discount in place yesterday, but as of right now it's had another discount taking it below the $200 mark. Boom.
🪑
So, what do you do if you want to buy a graphics card around Prime Day? Are there any deals worth a damn, and what if you actually want an Nvidia GPU, but have been put off by talk of an imminent RTX 50-series on the horizon?
Well, our gang—Messrs Nick and Jacob R.—have been running the rule over the best graphics card deals around right now and have picked out the absolute best GPU offers you can buy.
With rumours of an over-supply of AMD GPUs, and talk of that new generation of Blackwell GeForce cards, there actually are a selection of good graphics card deals. These two are probably my personal picks though, one an outstanding mid-ranger from AMD and the other a much improved Nvidia GPU that's at its lowest ever price.
XFX RX 7800 XT | 16 GB GDDR6 | 3,840 shaders | 2,430 MHz boost | $519.99 $427.47 at Amazon (save $92.52, exclusive to Prime members)
At this price point, the best card used to be the RX 6800 XT but these days we have deals like this one, where the newer 7800 XT has the same price tag. It's only a little bit faster than the card it's replaced, and admittedly it's not a huge discount, but you're still getting a lotta GPU for the money.
RX 7800 XT price check: Newegg $449.99 | Walmart $449.99 | Best Buy $449.99
MSI RTX 4070 Ti Super | 16 GB GDDR6X | 8,448 shaders | 2,655 MHz boost | $839.99 $749.99 at Amazon (save $90, exclusive to Prime members)
The RTX 4070 Ti Super might be relatively new to the market, but we're finally seeing discounts on what is a very performant card. This model is very solid and comes with a triple fan cooler, and with the power of DLSS 3 makes for a mighty addition to any gaming rig.
RTX 4070 Ti Super price check: Walmart $799.99 | Best Buy $829.99 | Newegg $769.99
LG UltraGear 34GP63A-B | 34-inch | 160 Hz | 3440 x 1440 | VA | $399.99 $236.99 at Amazon (save $163 with Prime membership)
At its current price, this LG ultrawide is a genuine bargain. By comparison, Alienware's fancy QD-OLED 34-inch panel is around $800 even on sale. This LG matches its size, resolution, aspect ratio and refresh rate for less than one-third of the price, although of course, it is a VA panel, not an OLED. It's also not the brightest gaming monitor ever, but it is a very good deal.
Price check: LG $249.99
When everything else is getting ludicrously expensive—looking at you, Jen-Hsun and your big fat graphics cards—it's been super gratifying to see gaming monitors becoming more affordable. Maybe it's because the premium end of the market is being swallowed up by OLEDs and as they get cheaper it's harder to try and command a high price for any old IPS or VA panel.
All the better for us, especially when a bona fide LG Ultrawide (hey, that rhymes) can be had for just $237 at Amazon. That's half the price it was at launch, and even if that is the Prime member price for Big Deal Days, it's still only $250 without being part of the Band of Bezos.
It's a lot of monitor, for sure. I love ultrawides; the expansive screenscape makes a big difference in games, and the 3440 x 1440 resolution isn't actually much more demanding of your GPU's resources compared with a now-standard 2560 x 1440 screen.
Razer BlackShark V2 Pro (Gen1) | 12–28,000 Hz | Wireless | 24 hours battery | $179.99 $129.99 at Newegg (save $50)
This is still the gaming headset I go back to regularly at home. It's comfortable, light, and has a great audio feel, too. And I love that physical volume knob on the left-hand ear cup. The mic isn't great and the 24 hour battery life looks limited against the Cloud Alpha Wireless, both things that were updated in the Gen2 model, but I've never been bothered by the battery life in real life. And at this price, I think I'd take them over the HyperX headset.
Price check: Amazon $179.99
I'm still a massive fan of Razer's BlackShark V2 Pro gaming headset. Outside of the mighty Audeze Maxwell's—my absolute favorite wireless cans—the Razer set is the one I keep coming back to. They're the headset that I use every day in the office and it's great to see them getting a decent discount down to $130. That's not an especially bargainous price, considering it's regularly been down to that level, but it's still a great headset and worth the money.
If you want ludicrous battery life, however, the HyperX Cloud Alpha Wireless is only a little more expensive at $134 at Amazon, and that will last you around 300 hours on a single charge. But I don't have nearly as much affection for that headset.
HyperX Cloud Alpha Wireless | 15-21,000 Hz | Wireless | 300 hours battery | $199.99 $134.43 at Amazon (save $65.56)
The HyperX Cloud Alpha is the best wireless gaming headset right now, and it's not just because of the usual quality audio, mic, and comfort (although of course, it has all these things, too, just like the wired version). In addition to all this, however, by some sorcery, the Cloud Alpha Wireless has 300 hours of battery life. Yes, three hundred. That justifies every penny of its full retail price, let alone with this stellar discount.
Price check: Newegg $149
- CyberPowerPC Gamer Master (🤢) | RTX 4060 Ti | $930 @ Amazon
- Yeyian Tanto | RTX 4070 | $1,099 @ Newegg
If I'm buying a whole new gaming PC around Prime Day this year then I am 100% going to be in a position where I'm agonising over these two gaming PC deals 👆
That's one of the most affordable RTX 4060 Ti gaming PCs I've seen this year and that makes the CyberPowerPC (I refuse to type out the rest of its stoopid name again) a hugely tempting machine, for a good price. As well as that GPU you've got 16 GB of DDR5 memory and a decently capacious 1 TB SSD. Pretty standard fair, but absolutely the sort of spec you'd want and expect at this price.
The CPU, however, is a bit of an oddity. It's the Ryzen 7 8700F. And when I first read that I initially thought it was some weird typo, and then I remembered AMD created these odd AM5 processors out of the Zen 4 mobile parts, but with the iGPU killed off. It's also had the PCIe 5.0 compatibility fused off, too, but is at least still an eight-core, 16-thread chip.
But not a proper chiplet Zen 4 chip. It's using the same Phoenix monolithic die as the Ryzen 7000-series mobile chips. So yeah, it's an oddity. Though it's in an AM5 motherboard, which will be upgradeable with proper Zen 5 CPUs and beyond.
CyberPowerPC Gamer Master | Ryzen 7 8700F | RTX 4060 Ti | 16 GB DDR5 | 1 TB SSD | $1,099.99 $929.99 at Amazon (save $170)
This is about as cheap as you'll get for an RTX 4060 Ti rig, and cheap it certainly is. This price range is usually reserved for RTX 4060 builds, but somehow CyberPowerPC has crept this RTX 4060 Ti build in here. It comes with the peculiar Ryzen 7 8700F, which isn't a bad performer by any means. This RTX 4060 Ti gaming PC has everything you might need out of an entry-level build, and should perform a fair chunk better than a 4060 build.
But then there's the Yeyian Tanto. It's $170 more expensive, and that's probably where my main tension would come from. Going over the $1,000 mark for a new gaming rig is a step beyond most people... hell, spending even $930 on a new gaming rig is beyond most people.
Though if you're going to stretch, that might be a stretch too far...
In the end, though, I think I'd probably feel it was worth it and not eat for a few weeks. I've got a ton of fat reserves I could live off, after all. The reason is the Tanto comes with the RTX 4070, which is a far superior graphics card to the RTX 4060 Ti. It's a 12 GB card vs. an 8 GB one, and you're getting effectively RTX 3080 gaming performance with the added benefits of DLSS 3.0 and Frame Generation.
It's also rocking a normal CPU. The Intel Core i5 13400F is still one of our favorite gaming processors; it's got a great mix of single-threaded grunt and a decent amount of multi-threaded power, too.
Yeyian Tanto | Intel Core i5 13400F | RTX 4070 | 16 GB DDR5-5600 | 1 TB SSD | $1,599 $1,099 at Newegg (save $500)
RTX 4070 machines can vary in price and specification quite significantly, but here you're getting that great 1440p GPU (with even some 4K credentials thanks to DLSS 3), a nice and speedy Core i5 paired with some good DDR5 RAM, and a 1 TB SSD. For close to a thousand bucks, that's a really great selection of hardware that makes it a great gaming rig for more like budget prices.
And just like that we're into 🥳day two of the Prime Big Deal Days event🥳, and it's probably very little surprise to see there still being a ton of great PC gaming goodies still available at great prices.
I do want to note that even once the October Prime Day is done tonight, most of the best deals are likely to carry on throughout the whole week. So, ignore any of those 'hurry, before it's too late!' headlines out there; don't be rushed. After all, Black Friday ain't far away and the deals will be back...
Though it is worth stating that from next week up until the November prices on PC gaming gear is likely to go up in preparation for retailers to be able to claim sizeable discounts come Black Friday.
Acer Nitro ED270U | 1440p | VA | FreeSync Premium | 170 Hz | $249.99 $149.99 at Newegg (save $100)
This is one of the best deals on a 1440p gaming monitor we've seen so far. A respectable brand and a respectable spec, although it might be worth holding out for an IPS panel. Still, a good price on a great little screen.
Price check: Amazon $169.99
Straight away we've got a new winner of The Cheapest 1440p Gaming Monitor award 🏆.
The Acer Nitro at just $150 from Newegg is a great deal. Some people might turn their noses up at VA panels, but you get great black levels and the color reproduction isn't a million miles away from proper IPS displays, either. And they're quicker in terms of response times, too.
I reckon 1440p is the sweet spot for PC gaming, and the Nitro proves you don't have to spend a fortune to get a great gaming setup anymore. Especially when it comes to screens!
At 170 Hz this FreeSync Premium monitor is no slouch when it comes to refresh rates. In short, if you're looking for a gaming monitor bargain right now, they don't come much better than this.
But there is at least one which is still better. It may be more expensive by six dollars and 77 cents, but the ASRock has a panel that is more than twice as bright (250 nits for the Acer vs. 550 nits for the ASRock) and has a fully adjustable stand, too. Worth the extra for me.
ASRock Phantom PG27Q15R2A | 27-inch | 165 Hz | 1440p | VA | FreeSync Premium | $239.99 $156.77 at Newegg (save $83.33)
ASRock's gaming monitors are always so darned cheap—we love them for that. This 1440p panel offers resolution and a rapid refresh rate for a potent PC gaming combo, though the built-in Wi-Fi antenna helps it stand out from the crowd. That's hardly essential, but could come in use for some.
Price check: Amazon $229
Team Group DDR5-6000 | 32 GB (2x16) | 6,000 MT/s | CL30 | 1.35 V | $106.99 $85.99 at Newegg (save $21)
Fast DDR5 RAM is expensive, right? Well this kit isn't and it's perfect for any AMD AM5 or latest Intel gaming PC. Sure it doesn't have nice RGB lighting but if you can live without that, you'll have no complaints. And if you don't like it in white, then the kit comes in black for the same price.
If you're building a new PC—à la Nick's Prime deal-beating PC—then chances are you're going to need some DDR5 memory, and thankfully that doesn't mean it's going to cost you a fortune any more. Prices have tumbled to the point where you can get a sweet-spot DDR5-6000 kit for just $86 at Newegg replete with a full 32 GB of dual channel memory. Oof, that be cheap.
Even if you're rocking a modern rig with 16 GB of DDR5 you may be finding creativity apps getting stuck, or even your tabs pile of shame in Chrome periodically locking up your PC, so upgrading to 32 GB could be the answer.
And this TeamGroup kit looks kindy pretty, too. Which is obviously important for memory sticks.
GameSir Nova Lite | Bluetooth | 2.4 GHz low-latency play | USB-C | $24.99 $19.99 at Amazon (save $5)
This controller is our best budget pick. Focussing on important features like Bluetooth functionality and Hall Effect sticks, it offers a solid experience at an exceedingly reasonable price. It'd be nice if that package also included a USB-C charging cable, but for most gamers with a cable horde of their own, this is a well-judged omission. The build quality can't stand shoulder to shoulder with Elite controllers, but for something both light in the hands and light on price, we can't complain.
🚨$20 HALL EFFECT PC CONTROLLER ALERT🚨
Seriously? I thought Hall effect sticks for game pads made them super expensive. But no, it turns out that I'm a victim of Big Pad marketing ploys, and actually you can ditch stick drift forever without spending a fortune on a new controller.
This GameSir pad is our current favorite budget game pad and is on sale for Prime Day for just $20. That's a great price for a main controller or even just a secondary pad for your buddy.
Sytech Blaze4 Mini | Ryzen 7 5700 | RTX 4070 Super | 16 GB DDR4-3200 | 1 TB SSD | $1,299.99 $1,099.99 at Walmart (save $200)
Someone hold the actual boat, because we have here an RTX 4070 Super build for $1,100, which is less than not only most RTX 4070 (non-Super) builds but even many RTX 4060 Ti builds. Yes, it has a CPU that's now two generations old, and yes it only has 16 GB of DDR4 RAM, and these (especially the latter) are significant sacrifices. But for a 4070 Super build at this price? Come on. I'll take that deal any day. The GPU is the most important component for gaming, after all. I would consider slapping in 32 GB of faster RAM down the line, though.
Our Jacob's flabbergasted, and that's not a word we use lightly on PC Gamer. Honestly, I'm on the flabbergast tip, too, having seen the price of this full RTX 4070 Super gaming PC. It's genuinely cheaper than most RTX 4060 Ti PCs we've seen this Prime Day, and I'd already gotten excited about seeing an RTX 4070 PC for this price.
If you're looking to buy a full rig this Prime Day 👆 this is the gaming PC that I would want to buy. You can argue that the last-gen CPU isn't particularly enticing, but it's still an eight-core, 16-thread chip and the AM4 motherboard platform has some life in it yet. Equally DDR4 memory will still serve you well for years to come, too.
Really, it's all about the performance of that RTX 4070 Super, and that's a graphics card that I'm a big fan of.
Asus TUF A16 | Ryzen 7 7735HS | Radeon RX 7700S | 16-inch | 1200p | 165 Hz | 16 GB DDR5-4800 | 512 GB SSD | $1,099.99 $699.99 at Best Buy (save $400)
If it wasn't for the 512 GB SSD being a bit small, I would have nothing negative to say about this budget gaming laptop. At just $700 it's a great price for a machine that will generally outperform an RTX 4060-based laptop. But that miserly storage isn't much of an issue as there's a second M.2 slot inside for you to add a second SSD and instantly bump up the game-holding capacity. The Ryzen CPU is an eight-core, 16-thread job, and the Radeon chip may not cope too well with ray traced games, but then neither does an RTX 4060 even with DLSS as a crutch.
This is my favorite budget gaming laptop I've seen so far this Prime Day. For $700 you are getting a whole lot of laptop for your money, and look, there's a rarely seen AMD mobile GPU in there. What a find?!
The actual gaming performance of the Radeon RX 7700S is a story that should be familiar to anyone who's been watching the industry over the past couple of years. The AMD chip can outperform competing Nvidia GPUs—the RTX 4050 and RTX 4060—in pretty much all straight rasterized gaming scenarios. But, as soon as you start to introduce ray tracing workloads to a game it really starts to struggle.
To be fair, so do both the low-end Nvidia cards, it's just that the RX 7700S struggles more. Realistically you're not going to want to enable RT effects with either GPU, so imma recommend this Radeon-powered laptop as the go-to budget gaming notebook de jour.
Logitech G920 | Racing wheel and pedals | Gear drive | Trueforce | $299.99 $189.99 at Amazon (save $110)
Sim racing gear gets very expensive, very quickly. If you're just looking for some cheap thrills—or want to dip your toes into some racing booties without spending the Earth—this Logitech set is pretty much the perfect place to start. It's got everything you need to get yourself up and running, and it's the wheel and pedal set that most professional sim racers used to learn the ropes.
Price check: Best Buy $199.99 | Newegg $199.99
I've only just got back into a position where I can jam a steering wheel onto my desk and throw myself into some good ol' fashioned sim racing. You know, like they used to do in the olden times?
It's purely because I've got a new desk which no longer doubles as my PC case; my old Lian Li desk/case served me well, but was too chonk to be able to clamp a steering wheel to.
I had the Logitech G29 for the longest time—which is the PlayStation equivalent of this Xbox-setup steering wheel—and it was the thing which got me into proper sim racing games over the usual arcade fare. It's a great wheel, with excellent force feedback and pedals. It may not stand up against the far more expensive Moza or Fanatec kit, but this is all you need to whet your simmy appetite.
Prime Day Prime Big Deal Days are getting close to their twighlight hours as we head deep into the final day, but it's safe to say there have actually been some really good deals this time around.
In fact I think these are the deals which have made it all but impossible to recommend much else.
- Laptop: Asus TUF A16 | Ryzen 7 7735HS | Radeon RX 7700S | 16-inch | 1200p | 165 Hz | 16 GB DDR5-4800 | 512 GB SSD | $700@ Best Buy
- Laptop: Dell G15 | Ryzen 7 7840HS | RTX 4060 | 15-inch | 165 Hz | 1080p | 16 GB DDR5-4800 | 512 GB SSD | $850 @ Dell
- PC: Lenovo Legion Tower 5 Gen 8 | Ryzen 7 7700 | RTX 4070 Ti Super | 32 GB DDR5 | 1 TB SSD | $1,600 @ Newegg
- PC: Yeyian Yumi | Ryzen 5 5600X | Nvidia RTX 4060 | 16 GB DDR4-3200 | 1 TB SSD | $800 @ Newegg
- Monitor: ASRock Phantom PG27Q15R2A | 27-inch | 165Hz | 1440p | VA | FreeSync Premium | $157 @ Newegg
- SSD: Lexar NM790| 1 TB | NVMe | PCIe 4.0 | 7,400 MB/s read | 6,500 MB/s write | $72 @ Amazon
- Gaming chair: Corsair TC 100 Relaxed gaming chair | Fabric | Black | Lumbar pillow | 2D armrests | $220 @ Newegg
- OLED monitor: MSI MAG 321UP | 32-inch | 165 Hz | QD-OLED | $774.12 @ Amazon