Wed 15 Jul 2026 / 10:47 ET
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Hardware 3 min read

Newegg bundles Ryzen 7 7800X3D, B650E board and DDR5 for $636.99

The combo includes a Gigabyte B650E motherboard, 16GB of TeamGroup DDR5-6000 memory and a free MSI 240mm liquid cooler.

Mara Chen-Doyle

By Mara Chen-Doyle / Staff Writer

Newegg bundles Ryzen 7 7800X3D, B650E board and DDR5 for $636.99
img: Tom's Hardware

Newegg is selling a desktop upgrade bundle built around AMD’s Ryzen 7 7800X3D for $636.99, with the retailer claiming $188.99 in combined savings. For PC builders pricing out an AM5 gaming rig, the draw is not subtle: the package covers the CPU, motherboard, memory and cooler in one checkout line.

The bundle includes an AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D processor, a Gigabyte B650E Eagle motherboard and a 16GB TeamGroup T-Force Delta RGB DDR5 kit. Newegg is also including an MSI MAG Coreliquid 240mm cooler, listed as a $69.99 add-on, at no extra charge.

Tom’s Hardware calculated that, inside the combo pricing, the DDR5 kit effectively lands at $61.99 before counting the cooler’s value. The same report said a comparable standalone 16GB DDR5 kit with similar specifications was listed at $202.97. As with most retailer bundles, that math depends on the assumed prices of each part, so treat it as deal arithmetic rather than a law of physics.

What is in the bundle

The CPU is the Ryzen 7 7800X3D, an eight-core AM5 chip with a 4.2GHz base clock and boost speeds up to 5GHz. Its key gaming feature is 96MB of L3 cache. That larger cache gives the processor more nearby data to work with, reducing trips out to slower system memory during games. Lower memory latency can help frame rates and frame pacing, which is why AMD’s X3D chips have stayed relevant with gamers even after newer processors arrived.

Tom’s Hardware’s review described the 7800X3D as a strong gaming CPU at launch, and its benchmark hierarchy still ranks the chip highly for games. The same testing notes that it is no longer the fastest gaming processor available, which is the normal fate of silicon after the next wave of launches.

The motherboard is Gigabyte’s B650E Eagle, a mainstream AM5 board rather than a luxury slab of heatsinks with a PCIe slot hiding underneath. Its listed features include 2.5Gb Ethernet, Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.3, multiple USB Type-A and Type-C ports, and four M.2 slots for SSDs. Two of those M.2 slots support Gen 5 speeds, according to the deal description.

The memory kit is TeamGroup T-Force Delta RGB DDR5 with two 8GB modules, for 16GB total. It is rated for 6,000 MT/s, with 38-38-38-78 timings, and supports both Intel XMP and AMD EXPO profiles. The motherboard supports those overclocking profiles as well, according to the bundle details.

One small mess in the listing copy deserves a raised eyebrow: one promotional block refers to 32GB of TeamGroup DDR5, while the actual described kit is 16GB, specifically two 8GB sticks. Buyers should verify the cart contents before paying, because retail pages are quite capable of being wrong in the least amusing direction.

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

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