>>16561697Okay—$3K makes a lot more sense for a build like that.
If those specs are real and accurately identified, then
$3,000 is actually a pretty normal (even slightly decent) price for a high-end AM5 + RTX 4070 Ti Super system with:
* Ryzen 9 X3D-class CPU
* ASUS ROG Crosshair X870E Hero (very expensive board)
* 64GB DDR5-6000 CL28 (premium kit)
* RTX 4070 Ti Super
* 3TB of Samsung NVMe storage total
* 360Hz 1440p monitor included
That kind of full setup (PC + monitor + peripherals) often lands around:
*
$2,500–$3,500 used*
$3,500–$4,500+ new depending on regionSo $3K isn’t suspicious on its own.
—
### The only thing I’d still double-check (important)
Even if the price is realistic, the *hardware listing you pasted earlier has one big red flag*:
* “Ryzen 9 9900X3D (Zen 5)” — that name/spec combo is unusual enough that I’d verify it in
CPU-Z* Also confirm GPU in
GPU-Z actually shows “4070 Ti Super” and not a spoofed string
People often copy fake “dream specs” into system info tools or listings, so the price can be real while the specs are slightly different.
—
### Bottom line
*
$3K = plausible for a high-end full setup* Nothing immediately screams scam based on price alone
* But you should still verify CPU/GPU with hardware tools to be 100% sure what you actually got
If you want, send a CPU-Z + GPU-Z screenshot and I’ll tell you instantly if everything matches or if something’s off.