The Andromeda Insights RTX 5080 prebuilt gaming PC just dropped to $2,349.99 at Walmart via Newegg, with free shipping included. For a machine packing one of Nvidia's fastest consumer GPUs alongside a brand-new Intel CPU, that price is genuinely hard to ignore.

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What's actually inside the box
The headline spec is the GeForce RTX 5080, which sits just below the $2,000 RTX 5090 in Nvidia's current lineup and outperforms the discontinued RTX 4090 that used to cost $1,600. That positioning matters: you're getting near-top-tier 4K performance without paying the flagship premium.
The CPU is an Intel Core Ultra 5 250KF, a 2026 Arrow Lake refresh with 18 cores and a max turbo frequency of 5.3GHz. Here's the thing: this chip is genuinely well-suited for gaming. Stepping up to a Core Ultra 7 or 9 won't produce any meaningful frame rate gains in games, so the build doesn't cut corners where it counts.
Rounding out the specs: 32GB of DDR5-6000MHz RAM, a 1TB M.2 SSD, and a 360mm liquid cooler keeping the CPU in check. The liquid cooling is worth calling out specifically because prebuilts at this price often ship with budget air coolers that throttle under sustained load.
Why the RTX 5080 hits different right now
Nvidia's DLSS 4.5 update, released recently, pushed multi-frame generation and upscaling quality noticeably further. Games like Doom: The Dark Ages, Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, and Battlefield 6 already support it, with more titles adding compatibility on a rolling basis. An RTX 5080 paired with DLSS 4.5 means you're not just buying current performance, you're buying headroom for the next wave of demanding titles.
4K at high settings with ray tracing enabled is a realistic expectation here, not a marketing stretch. If you've been squeezing frames out of an older GPU and wondering whether it's time to check our Helldivers 2 PC settings guide to keep things playable, a build like this makes those workarounds unnecessary.
How $2,350 stacks up against the alternatives
Building an equivalent PC from scratch right now is a significant challenge. RTX 5080 cards alone are selling at or above MSRP, and factoring in a current-gen Intel platform, DDR5 RAM, an NVMe SSD, a 360mm AIO cooler, a case, and a power supply, you'd be spending more before accounting for assembly time.
The key here is that prebuilt pricing has historically carried a convenience tax. This particular configuration bucks that trend. The component selection is sensible, nothing is obviously underspecced to hit a price target, and the liquid cooling suggests the builder isn't cutting corners on thermals.
For players who want to drop into demanding titles without tuning anything, this is a ready-to-go solution. That said, if you do want to squeeze every last frame out of whichever game you're running, our 007 First Light PC settings guide and the rest of our gaming guides cover the settings side of the equation for a growing list of titles.
The deal is live now at Walmart via Newegg. Given how quickly RTX 5080 inventory moves at anything close to reasonable pricing, this one is worth checking sooner rather than later.








