The Best Black Friday Desktop Computer Deals 2022

If you’ve held out for not one, but two Prime Days worth of computer sales, plus some seasonal and semi-annual discounts from Dell and other PC makers, Black Friday and Cyber Monday are your last chance this year to score substantial savings.

The Best Black Friday Deals on Desktops

Desktops are typically more powerful than laptops and they’re much easier to upgrade, if you’re the DIY type. You can customize your rig to suit your needs more easily, too, whether you want more processing power to multitask, a better GPU to run games or video- and photo-editing software, or more storage to keep more files.


Alienware R14

Alienware Aurora R14 Ryzen 7 RTX 3080 Ti

Alienware’s Aurora Ryzen Edition R14 desktop is nearly $700 off its retail price. This configuration has a speedy AMD Ryzen 5000 series processor and a powerful RTX 3080 Ti graphics card. Alienware towers are built with upgraders in mind, so this desktop can change as your needs do. Plus, the brutal action shooter Warhammer 40,000: Darktide is included.


Lenovo IdeaCentre 5i

Lenovo IdeaCentre 5i Intel i7 RTX 3060

With a 12th Generation Intel Core i7 processor, RTX 3060 graphics card, 512GB SSD, and 16GB RAM, this Lenovo IdeaCentre Gaming 5i desktop is the perfect entry-level gaming configuration at a palatable price. While this isn’t technically a sale, it’s still a great value for the money. Plus, Best Buy price matches, so if it does go down in price for the holidays, you’re good to go.


Inspiron 3910

Dell Inspiron 3910 Intel i5 256GB SSD

This Inspiron 3910 series desktop features a 12th Generation Intel Core i5 processor, 256GB SSD, and 8GB RAM. This is an entry-level desktop for those who don’t need too much processing power, but want to multitask including word processing, surfing the web, and streaming music and video. It’s a well-priced daily-use desktop.

FAQ

How much should I pay for a desktop computer?

Your money goes further with desktop PCs and their components versus laptops. You can find complete mini PCs for very light work or display-signage duty for less than $400, and perfectly serviceable small towers for $400 to $600. Gaming desktops with dedicated graphics cards start at around $500 to $600. You can also find all-in-one (AIO) desktops, with the display and all of the computing components built into a single device, starting at around $400. The sky’s the limit once you get into high-end gaming PCs and business-workstation power desktops, but the prices above are the right range for most mainstream buyers.

Is it better to get an all-in-one computer or desktop?

Traditional tower desktops offer the most upgrade and power flexibility, at the cost of bulk. Most towers have generous interior space and full-size motherboards, so you can install one or more (sometimes, many more) secondary storage drives, more RAM in empty slots on the motherboard, and a video card (if the PC doesn’t come with one). PC gamers will want to stick with a traditional tower.

An all-in-one desktop‘s big appeal is saving you lots of space, since the PC is built right in, with the components living behind the display. It comes down to how much you care about the desk area your PC uses up, and whether you happen to be shopping for a desktop monitor at the same time. Budget AIOs with basic feature sets are common, but spending more can gain you some combination of a touch-enabled screen, a panel with high native resolution, roomier storage, and a more muscular processor. Higher-end AIO desktops tend to cater, though, to content creators and productivity-app power users, not gamers,

Is it cheaper to build a PC or buy one right now?

It depends, largely, on the kind of desktop you are looking to buy or build. At the low end, economies of scale for the components, plus the cost of single Windows 10 or 11 licenses, tend to make buying a prebuilt PC a better deal. It’s when you get into the $1,000-and-up zone that building your own starts to make more sense, especially if you can reuse parts from an existing PC build. For the last few years, the inflated cost of graphics cards made building your own PC a lot less attractive. That price pressure has relented in 2022, though.

How much does a good budget PC cost?

Expect to pay a solid $400 to $500 for a basic, competent small tower for day-in/day-out productivity and web work. You’ll find plenty of models below $400, especially in the mini PC class, but you should insist on at least 8GB of system memory for any Windows machine, and, for anything beyond very basic productivity work, a Core i3 or Ryzen 3 processor.

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