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$8000* Disaster Prebuilt PC – Corsair & Origin Fail Again

00* Disaster Prebuilt PC – Corsair & Origin Fail Again

The RTX 5090 is the most valuable thing in this for its 32GB of VRAM, and to show you how much they care about the only reason you’d buy this prebuilt, Origin incinerates the memory at 100 degrees Celsius by choosing to not spin the fans for 8 minutes while under load. 

The so-called “premium” water cooling includes tubes made out of discolored McDonald’s toy plastic that was left in the sun too long, making it look old, degraded, and dirty.

But there are some upsides for this expensive computer. For example, it’s quiet, to its credit, mostly because the fans don’t spin…for 8 minutes.

Overview

Originally, this Origin Genesis pre-built cost $6,488 – and that’s after taxes and a $672 discount off the initial sticker price of $6,722. We ordered it immediately after the RTX 5090 launch, which turned out to be one of the only reliable ways to actually get a 5090 with supply as bad as it was (and continues to be). It took a while to come in, but it did arrive in the usual Origin crate.

We reviewed one of these a couple years ago that was a total disaster of a combo. 

The system had a severely underclocked CPU, ridiculously aggressive fan behavior (which is the opposite of the system we’re reviewing today), chipped paint, and a nearly unserviceable hardline custom liquid cooling loop. Hopefully this one has improved. And hopefully isn’t 1GHz below spec.

Parts and Price

Origin PC RTX 5090 + 9800X3D “Genesis” Part Prices | GamersNexus
Part Name Retail Price 4/25
Motherboard MSI PRO B650-P WIFI $190
CPU Ryzen 7 9800X3D $480
Graphics Card NVIDIA RTX 5090 Founders Edition $2,000
RAM Corsair Vengeance DDR5-6000 (2x16GB) $93
SSD 1 Corsair MP600 CORE XT 1TB PCIe 4 M.2 SSD $70
Custom Loop “Hydro X iCUE LINK Cooling” / Pump, Rad, Block, Fittings $712
Fans 12x Corsair iCUE LINK RX120 120mm Fan $360
Case Corsair 7000D Airflow $240
PSU Corsair RM1200x SHIFT 80+ Gold PSU $230
RGB/Fan Controller 2x Corsair iCUE Link System Hub $118
Operating System Windows 11 N/A
T-Shirt ORIGIN PC T-Shirt N/A
Mousepad ORIGIN PC Mouse Pad N/A
Shipping “ORIGIN Maximum Protection Shipping Process: ORIGIN Wooden Crate Armor” N/A
??? “The ORIGIN Difference: Unrivaled Quality & Performance” Priceless
Total retail cost of all parts as of April 2025 $4,493

We’ll price it out based on the original, pre-tariff $6,050 build before taxes and with a 10% off promo. Keep in mind that the new price is $7,500 to $8,400, depending on when you buy.

The good news is that nothing is proprietary – all of its parts are standard. The bad news is that this means we can directly compare it to retail parts which, at the time we wrote this piece, would cost $4,493, making for a $1,557 markup compared to the pre-tax subtotal. That’s a huge amount to pay for someone to screw the parts together. 

Given the price of the system, the MSI PRO B650-P WIFI motherboard and 1TB SSD are stingy and the 7000D Airflow case is old at this point. The parts don’t match the price.

Just two months after we ordered and around when it finally arrived, Origin now offers a totally different case and board with the Gigabyte X870E Aorus Elite. The base SSD is still just 1TB though – only good enough for roughly two or three full Call of Duty installs. 

The detailed packing sheet lists 22 various water cooling fittings, but, curiously, the build itself only has 15, plus one more in the accessory kit, making it 16 by our count. We don’t know how Origin got 22 here, but it isn’t 22. Hopefully we weren’t charged for 22. 

Oh, and it apparently comes with “1 Integrated High-Definition.” Good. That’s good. We wouldn’t want 0 integrated high definitions.

Similar to last time, you also get “The ORIGIN Difference: Unrivaled Quality & Performance” as a line item. Putting intangible, unachievable promises on the literal receipt is the Origin way: Origin’s quality is certainly rivaled.

Against DIY, pricing is extreme and insane as an absolute dollar amount when the other SIs are around $500-$800 markup at the high end. In order for this system to be “worth” $1,500 more than DIY, it would need to be immaculate and it’s not. The only real value the PC offers is the 5090. Finding a 5090 Founders Edition now for $2,000 is an increasingly unlikely scenario. Lately, price increases with scarcity and tariffs have resulted in 5090s closer to $2,800 or more, so the markup with that instead would be $777 if we assume a 5090 costs $2,800. That’s still a big markup, and the motherboard is still disappointing, the tubes are still discolored, the SSD is too small, and it still has problems with the fans not properly spinning, but it’s less insane.

Build Quality

Getting into the parts choices:

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