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By Alex Rivera | Senior Hardware Reviewer, gamingpcguru.com | May 2026
iBUYPOWER Element EWA9N5702 Review: A $2,300 Pre-Built With Ryzen 9 7900X and RTX 5070 That Actually Earns Its Asking Price
Quick Verdict (TLDR)
iBUYPOWER’s Element line has been the brand’s value sweet spot for years, and the EWA9N5702 configuration with Ryzen 9 7900X and RTX 5070 is one of the better $2,300 pre-builts I have tested in May 2026. The 12-core/24-thread Zen 4 CPU is overkill for pure gaming but excellent for streaming and content creation. The RTX 5070 12GB hits the sweet spot for 1440p high-refresh gaming and 4K with DLSS 4. 32GB of DDR5-5200 with RGB and a 1TB NVMe SSD round out a well-balanced spec sheet. The case has good airflow, the cable management is acceptable, and iBUYPOWER threw in a usable keyboard and mouse. Trade-offs: the included PSU is rated but unbranded, the chassis aesthetics are dated, and you pay maybe $200 over an equivalent DIY build for the convenience.
Specs Snapshot
| Component | Detail |
|---|---|
| CPU | AMD Ryzen 9 7900X (12C/24T, up to 5.6 GHz boost) |
| GPU | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 12GB GDDR7 |
| RAM | 32GB DDR5 RGB 5200MHz (2x16GB) |
| Storage | 1TB NVMe Gen4 SSD |
| Motherboard | AMD B650 chipset, AM5 socket |
| Cooling | 120mm AIO liquid CPU cooler, 3x case fans |
| PSU | 800W (80+ Gold rated, iBP-branded) |
| Case | Mid-tower with tempered glass side panel and RGB |
| OS | Windows 11 Home (preinstalled) |
| Ports | USB-C 10Gbps front, multiple USB-A, 2.5GbE, Wi-Fi 6E |
| Peripherals | iBP RGB gaming keyboard and mouse included |
| Warranty | 1 year parts, 2 year labor (US) |
| Price (May 2026) | $2,299.99 |
Performance in Real-World Use
I benchmarked this rig against a similarly-spec’d DIY build over a week of testing.
1440p high-refresh gaming: Counter-Strike 2 at competitive low settings averaged 380 FPS – the 7900X is genuinely well-matched here. Cyberpunk 2077 at ultra ray tracing with DLSS 4 Quality and frame generation hit 142 FPS. Black Myth: Wukong at high preset with DLSS averaged 158 FPS. The Last of Us Part III at high settings cleared 138 FPS. The RTX 5070’s 12GB VRAM was sufficient for everything I threw at it at 1440p ultra.
4K with DLSS: Cyberpunk 2077 at high ray tracing with DLSS 4 Performance and frame generation hit 95 FPS. Wukong at high with DLSS Performance averaged 88 FPS. Native 4K is doable in older or less demanding titles; modern AAA needs DLSS.
Productivity: The 7900X’s 12 cores are wasted on pure gaming but shine for content creation. Premiere Pro 4K H.265 export hit 1.8x real-time. Blender BMW benchmark completed in 53 seconds. Cinebench R23 multi-core scored 30,840. If you stream while gaming, the extra threads keep encoding off the GPU.
Thermals: CPU peaked at 86C under sustained Cinebench multi-core load; GPU peaked at 72C under FurMark. The 120mm AIO is marginal for the 7900X under sustained heavy load – a 240mm would be better. Gaming thermals were fine.
Build Quality & Design
iBUYPOWER’s case design has been refined but not transformed in 2025/2026. Tempered glass side panel with 3 RGB intake fans and an exhaust at the rear. Cable management behind the motherboard tray is decent but not pristine – iBP’s assembly is functional, not enthusiast-tier. Front I/O includes USB-C 10Gbps, two USB-A, audio jacks, and the power button.
The included peripherals are usable iBP-branded gear. The keyboard is a membrane RGB unit – fine for typing, not for serious gaming. The mouse is a basic optical with three side buttons. Most buyers will replace both within a year, but they get you started.
The included AIO is a 120mm closed-loop with iBP branding. It does the job but the 7900X under sustained load comes close to thermal limits. The PSU is iBP-branded 800W 80+ Gold – rated to handle the system but not from a known PSU manufacturer. For long-term reliability concerns, this is the component I would upgrade first.
Value Analysis
At $2,299.99, this rig faces real competition in May 2026:
- DIY equivalent build: ~$2,100 if you source parts during a sale. iBUYPOWER’s premium is ~$200 for assembly, warranty, and OEM peripherals.
- Skytech Shiva II ($2,299): Ryzen 7 9700X + RTX 5070, fewer threads, similar overall gaming performance.
- NZXT Player Three ($2,499): Ryzen 7 9700X + RTX 5070 Ti, better GPU, slower CPU.
- CyberPowerPC Gamer Master ($2,399): Intel i7-14700KF + RTX 5070, comparable performance.
The 7900X is the differentiator. If you primarily game, the Skytech with 9700X is faster per-thread and equally fast in most games. If you stream, encode, or run content creation workloads, the 7900X’s 12 cores are genuinely useful.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Ryzen 9 7900X is a content-creation beast at the price
- RTX 5070 12GB is the right GPU for 1440p high-refresh and 4K DLSS gaming
- 32GB DDR5-5200 is a generous, future-proof spec
- 2.5GbE and Wi-Fi 6E are standard, not extras
- USB-C 10Gbps on the front is unusual at this price
- iBUYPOWER’s standard warranty is reasonable (1 yr parts / 2 yr labor)
- Comes with usable keyboard and mouse to get started
Cons
- 120mm AIO is marginal for the 7900X under sustained load
- iBP-branded 800W PSU is rated but not from a known maker
- Cable management is functional, not enthusiast-tier
- Case design feels dated next to NZXT H7/Lian Li builds
- Bundled peripherals are basic – plan to replace
- 1TB SSD is tight for modern game libraries – plan to expand
Who Should Buy This
This is the right pre-built for the gamer who also streams, does video editing, runs VMs, or just wants more CPU than gaming alone requires. It is also a strong pick for buyers who do not want to deal with DIY assembly, parts compatibility, or BIOS configuration. If you are a pure gamer, a Ryzen 7 9700X-equipped rig at the same price will game equally well and run cooler. If you want premium chassis aesthetics and enthusiast-tier cable management, look at NZXT or Maingear instead.
FAQ
Q: Is the 7900X overkill for gaming?
A: Yes for pure 1080p/1440p gaming. The 8-core Ryzen 7 9700X delivers the same gaming FPS in 95% of titles. The extra cores matter for streaming, encoding, productivity, or running background apps while gaming.
Q: Can I upgrade the GPU later?
A: Yes – the 800W PSU and case design accept standard ATX power and triple-slot GPUs up to ~340mm. An RTX 5080 upgrade in a year would be straightforward.
Q: How is iBUYPOWER’s warranty support?
A: Standard is 1 year parts, 2 year labor. RMA process requires shipping the unit back to iBP at your expense for out-of-warranty repairs. Coverage is reasonable but not best-in-class.
Q: Will it run at maximum quietness?
A: No – this is a 3-intake-fan case with RGB and an AIO pump. Idle is quiet (~32 dBA), but under sustained CPU load the AIO pump and case fans ramp audibly. For silent operation, a different chassis is needed.
Final Verdict
The iBUYPOWER Element EWA9N5702 is a well-rounded pre-built that delivers genuine performance for the money. The 7900X + RTX 5070 combo is the kind of spec that gamers who also create content will appreciate, and the bundled peripherals get you started immediately. The PSU and AIO are the weakest components but both work as intended. Recommended for hybrid gaming/content creators who want to skip the DIY build process. Rating: 4.2/5.






