Corsair Vengeance a7500 review: High performance blended with high style

Premium hardware delivers premium performance

Corsair Vengeance a7500
Editor's Choice
(Image: © Tom's Hardware)

Tom's Hardware Verdict

Although the Corsair Vengeance a7500 is priced out of the mainstream realm, its premium hardware and high-flying gaming performance make it a real standout.

Pros

  • +

    Impressive gaming performance

  • +

    Fast PCIe 5.0 SSD

  • +

    Good looking and high

  • +

    quality case

  • +

    Plenty of RGB accoutrements

  • +

    Two-year warranty

Cons

  • -

    Pricey

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When it comes to the best gaming PCs available for consumers, there’s an embarrassment of riches covering a wide variety of price points. Today, we have the Corsair Vengeance a7500, which includes plenty of high-end hardware to satisfy demanding gamers.

The system is loaded to the gills with an AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D processor, 32GB of DDR5 memory, a 1TB PCIE 5.0 SSD, a Corsair Nautilus 240mm water cooling unit, and an attractive Corsair 3500X mid-tower case. And we’d be remiss if we didn’t mention that the Vengeance a7500 is rocking a Blackwell-based GPU, in this case, an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Ti.

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CPU

AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D

Motherboard

MSI Pro X870-P WiFi

Memory

Corsair Vengeance 32GB DDR5-6400 (2x 16GB)

Graphics

Gigabyte GeForce RTX 5070 Ti Gaming OC

Storage

Corsair MP700 Elite 1TB PCIe 5.0 SSD

Networking

5 Gbps Ethernet (Realtek 8126VB), Wi-Fi 7 (Qualcomm FastConnect 7800), Bluetooth 5.4

Top Ports

2x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C, 3.5 mm headphone/microphone

Rear Ports

4x USB 2.0 Type-A, 1x USB 40 Gbps Type-C, 2x USB 5 Gbps Type-A, 2x USB 10 Gbps Type-A, 1x USB 20 Gbps Type-C, 3x audio jacks, 2x antenna ports

Video Outputs

3x DisplayPort, 1x HDMI

Power Supply

Corsair 850W 80+ Gold (Modular)

Cooling

Corsair Nautilus 240mm Liquid Cooling

Operating System

Windows 11 Home

Dimensions (WxDxH)

9.45 x 18.11 x 19.92 inches

Price as Configured

$2,799.99

Brandon Hill

Brandon Hill is a senior editor at Tom's Hardware. He has written about PC and Mac tech since the late 1990s with bylines at AnandTech, DailyTech, and Hot Hardware. When he is not consuming copious amounts of tech news, he can be found enjoying the NC mountains or the beach with his wife and two sons.

  • Mindstab Thrull
    Just for comparison, if you were to purchase all the components separately for the a7500 and put it together yourself, it would cost $2,533.89.
    You're saying this is north of $650 difference between what Corsair sells this for and what you can build it yourself for. I would like to see how you come up with this pricing. I'm by no means saying you chose bad components or whatnot - far from it - but I find a roughly 25% increase over base cost to be pretty large, especially when we're looking about pre-built PC's. Are we talking "these are compatible parts" or "these are as far as I can tell the exact same parts they use"? INQUIRING MINDS WANT TO KNOW!

    Mindstab Thrull
    *looks up at Endrek Sahr wistfully* When's lunch?
    Reply
  • Heat_Fan89
    I've gotten tired of the fish tank and glow in the dark RGB setups. My recent build was all black and the only RGB is from the ASUS TUF which is subtle and the Thermalright AIO which is a halo just so I know it is on. All the fans are black and no RGB.

    The corsair setup is priced too high. I did a similar build with a 9800X3D, 5080 64GB of CL30 RAM and a 1000W Corsair PSU for under $2500.
    Reply
  • cknobman
    $2800 and only a 5070ti!?
    Is that serious?
    Reply