AMD’s Ryzen 7 9800X3D is already the kind of CPU PC gamers stare at when planning a serious build. Now, Newegg has made the deal more spicy: the chip is listed in a bundle with a free Corsair CX750M power supply, bringing the effective value much lower than usual.
The headline number is US$419, which is already a solid drop from the Ryzen 7 9800X3D’s US$479 launch price. For Malaysian readers, that is roughly around the high RM1,900 range before shipping, tax, exchange rate differences, and any import/warranty headaches. So yes, don’t blindly checkout just because the US price looks nice — but for anyone tracking global PC part prices, this is still a very interesting marker.
What the Newegg bundle includes
According to the listing highlighted by Wccftech, Newegg has a Ryzen 7 9800X3D bundle that includes a Corsair CX750M 750W power supply. The bundle appears at US$439, but a US$20 promo code brings it down to US$419.
That is the fun part: the CPU alone at US$419 is already a strong deal, but the Corsair PSU is valued at about US$64. If you look at it that way, the processor’s effective cost becomes much lower, assuming you actually need the PSU for a fresh PC build.
For Malaysian PC builders, this matters because the Ryzen 7 9800X3D is exactly the kind of chip people want for high-FPS gaming — esports titles, big open-world games, sim-heavy games, all that. If you’re building a new AM5 rig and planning to pair it with a strong GPU, saving money on the PSU can free up budget for RAM, storage, or graphics.
Good bundle, but check the PSU properly
The Corsair CX750M is a 750W semi-modular PSU, which is fine for many mid-range builds. Wccftech notes that it should be enough for something in the range of an RTX 5070 or RX 9070 XT style setup.
But there is one catch: this PSU does not come with newer ATX 3.1 or PCIe 5.1 certification, and it does not have a native 16-pin GPU connector. That means if you are planning an RTX 50-series card that uses a 16-pin power connector, you may need to rely on an adapter.
For SEA builders, especially those buying parts across different shops or importing components, that is where things can get messy. Adapters work, but for expensive GPUs, many builders would rather use a PSU with a native 12V-2x6 cable. Less cable drama, less anxiety, more peace of mind.
So the bundle is best for people who either need a decent PSU for a mid-range build, or are willing to sell the bundled unit and put that money toward a newer PSU.
There’s also a bigger combo
Newegg is also offering a larger bundle with the Ryzen 7 9800X3D, Corsair CX750M PSU, 32GB DDR5 memory, and a 1TB Samsung 9100 PRO SSD for US$919. Wccftech says buying those parts separately would cost over US$1,200.
Again, for Malaysians, the deal may not translate cleanly once you factor in shipping, local warranty, and customs. But as a global pricing signal, it is good news. When US retailers start bundling premium gaming CPUs more aggressively, local shops and regional marketplaces sometimes follow with their own promos later.
Bottom line: if you’re building a gaming PC around the Ryzen 7 9800X3D, this Newegg bundle is genuinely strong. Just don’t forget the boring-but-important part — PSU compatibility, warranty, and whether importing still beats buying locally in Malaysia.
Source: Wccftech Gaming