Fri 17 Jul 2026 / 09:55 ET
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Hardware 2 min read

Newegg bundles AMD’s Ryzen 7 7700X3D with board and RAM for $450.98

The combo pairs AMD’s new 3D V-Cache chip with an ASRock B650M board and 16GB of DDR5, though the memory setup has a catch.

Mara Chen-Doyle

By Mara Chen-Doyle / Staff Writer

Newegg bundles AMD’s Ryzen 7 7700X3D with board and RAM for $450.98
img: Tom's Hardware

Newegg is selling AMD’s Ryzen 7 7700X3D in a three-part PC bundle for $450.98, according to a deal reported by Tom’s Hardware. The package includes the processor, an ASRock B650M Pro RS WiFi Micro ATX motherboard, and 16GB of G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 memory.

The deal matters because the Ryzen 7 7700X3D has not looked especially compelling at its $329 suggested retail price, Tom’s Hardware said, given where AMD’s existing Ryzen 5 7600X3D and Ryzen 7 7800X3D sit in price and performance. Bundling it with an AM5 motherboard and DDR5 changes the math, assuming the discount survives checkout and stock does what PC hardware stock usually does.

Tom’s Hardware said the bundle is available through Newegg, which currently has exclusivity on the Ryzen 7 7700X3D. The processor was announced at Computex 2026 and slots between the 7600X3D and 7800X3D in AMD’s lineup.

What is in the bundle

  • AMD Ryzen 7 7700X3D processor
  • ASRock B650M Pro RS WiFi Micro ATX motherboard
  • 16GB G.Skill Flare X5 DDR5-6000 memory

Tom’s Hardware said the advertised savings total $202.99, or 31%. That comes from a $153.99 combo discount plus another $49 taken off with promo code PKC337 at checkout.

The Ryzen 7 7700X3D uses eight Zen 4 cores and has 104MB of combined L2 and L3 cache, according to Tom’s Hardware. The chip sits below the 7800X3D on clocks: Tom’s Hardware said the 7700X3D trims 200MHz from base clock and 500MHz from boost clock compared with the higher-end part.

In its review, Tom’s Hardware said the 7700X3D landed where expected in AMD’s product stack, between the 7600X3D and 7800X3D. The less flattering bit is performance: the review found the chip ran closer to the 7600X3D, with only a 2% difference in average performance.

The motherboard choice points the bundle toward a smaller AM5 gaming build. Micro ATX is not exotic, but it gives builders more case options than a full-size ATX board while still covering the core job: CPU, memory, storage, expansion, and Wi-Fi on one board.

The awkward part is the RAM. Tom’s Hardware said the included 16GB kit is a single stick, so the system will run, but it will miss the performance benefit of dual-channel memory. Adding another 16GB stick later would address that limitation, but that is extra spending, and discounts have a way of looking cleaner before the missing parts are counted.

This story draws on original reporting from Tom's Hardware.

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