Authorized retailer for
+45%
Avg. GPU Price Above MSRP
NVIDIA and AMD cards are selling above MSRP due to memory chip diversion to AI data centers.
+80%
DDR5 RAM Price Increase
Major suppliers are reallocating lines toward AI memory demand, tightening consumer DRAM supply.
Limited
RTX 5090 Availability
Foundry capacity remains constrained. Expect sporadic restocks through upcoming quarters.
Explore curated hardware across gaming, work, and creator setups.

Products
32+
Brands
12+
32 products

MSI
MSI
128GB of RAM in a laptop. 4K Mini-LED. This is not a laptop, it is a desktop that folds. Currently backordered.

NVIDIA
NVIDIA
The absolute king. MSRP was $1,999 but good luck finding one at that price. AI demand has pushed street prices past $2,800.

MSI
MSI
An AIO-cooled 5090 pushing 3GHz+ boost. Three fans on the radiator. Requires a case the size of a small refrigerator.

ASUS
ASUS
4K, OLED, 240Hz. The monitor that other monitors want to be. Samsung QD-OLED panel with ASUS calibration.

Samsung
Samsung
Gen5 speeds in a single-sided M.2 form factor. 4TB means fewer drives cluttering your build. Samsung's NAND leadership shows.

ASUS
ASUS
The apex predator. 18-inch Mini-LED panel with per-key RGB and a desktop-class RTX 5090 crammed into a laptop chassis.

NVIDIA
NVIDIA
The realistic choice for high-end gaming. Still $500 over MSRP because GDDR7 chips are being diverted to data center boards.

G.Skill
G.Skill
DDR5-8000 at CL36. A year ago this kit was $249. SK Hynix A-die is being funneled to HBM3e production for AI accelerators. Welcome to 2026 pricing.

Samsung
Samsung
Ultrawide OLED. Infinite contrast. 175Hz. Once you see OLED black levels in a dark room, there is no going back to LCD.

Razer
Razer
The shape that half the FPS pros use, now at 63 grams wireless. If your aim does not improve, the mouse is not the problem.

Logitech
Logitech
The other half of FPS pros use this one. 60 grams, 95-hour battery, and Logitech's bulletproof wireless. An industry benchmark.

Razer
Razer
CNC-milled aluminum. 16-inch OLED. The laptop that makes desktop gamers reconsider their life choices.

NVIDIA
NVIDIA
The new 1440p king. Would be the obvious recommendation at MSRP. At current street prices, still the best perf/dollar above the 5060.

Gigabyte
Gigabyte
Gigabyte's triple-fan cooler keeps this 5080 whisper-quiet under load. RGB if you are into that. Factory OC hits 2.8GHz.

Corsair
Corsair
64GB of premium DDR5 with Corsair's iCUE integration. Price reflects the Micron supply crunch -- they are shipping DDR5 wafers to their own HBM3e line.

LG
LG
The 27-inch 1440p OLED that proved the technology is ready for competitive gaming. Best monitor under $1000.

Razer
Razer
Analog optical switches with adjustable actuation. Set hair-trigger for gaming, deeper for typing. The keyboard equivalent of a sports car.

Seagate
Seagate
The Phison E26 controller is a known quantity. Reliable Gen5 speeds at a more accessible 2TB capacity.

Lenovo
Lenovo
Lenovo's thermal engineering lead means this 5080 runs cooler and quieter than competitors at this price.

NVIDIA
NVIDIA
The peoples' GPU -- if you can get it at MSRP. 16GB means it will age well. 128-bit bus is a compromise you will not feel at 1080p.

Corsair
Corsair
No RGB, no tower heatsink, just 64GB of fast DDR5 that fits under any cooler. Price doubled since Q1 2025.

Corsair
Corsair
It bends. Flat for productivity, curved for gaming. 45 inches of OLED. A conversation piece that also happens to be an excellent monitor.

SteelSeries
SteelSeries
ANC, dual wireless, hot-swap batteries, and audio quality that makes dedicated headphone users do a double-take. The complete package.

TeamGroup
TeamGroup
4TB Gen5 under $300. The graphene heatsink keeps thermals in check without adding bulk. Underrated.

Dell
Dell
18 inches of Alienware excess. Cherry MX keys, quad-fan cooling, and a screen big enough to watch from across the room.

HP
HP
OLED at this price is the headline. Add solid thermals and a clean design, and HP has a winner.

AMD
AMD
AMD's answer trades DLSS for FSR 4 and ray tracing lead for raw rasterization value. Less affected by the AI shortage since GDDR6 supply is more stable.

Kingston
Kingston
The entry-level DDR5 kit. Was $89 last year. Now $189 because even the lowest-bin DDR5 ICs are in demand. Still the cheapest way into DDR5-6000.

Acer
Acer
The sweet spot. Enough GPU grunt for 1440p high settings in everything, without selling a kidney.

Gigabyte
Gigabyte
Gigabyte's mechanical keyboard implementation is the best in any laptop. The 5080 and 240Hz panel do not hurt either.

Acer
Acer
The budget 1440p king. Not OLED, but IPS at this price with 180Hz is hard to argue with. Solid for the money.

TeamGroup
TeamGroup
Was $74. Now $159. The absolute floor price for 32GB DDR5. Gets the job done for Ryzen systems with EXPO profiles.