Pragmata gets an unusual kind of spotlight here: a B&H Photo deal on the MSI Aegis Z2 RTX 5070 Ti gaming PC drops the machine to $1,849.99 shipped, or $400 off. That matters because RTX 5070 Ti prebuilts now sit well above $2,000, and the graphics card alone would cost at least $1,000. If you’ve been waiting for a way into 4K PC gaming without paying a brutal markup, this is the sort of bundle that actually makes sense.

Quick Facts — Pragmata

DeveloperUniversal Studios Hollywood Hub
Platform(s)PC
Price$1,849.99

It also matters for Pragmata itself, because the game is optimized for Nvidia GeForce GPUs and uses DLSS 4.5 with multi-frame generating, path tracing, ray reconstruction, and super resolution. In plain terms, that means this PC isn’t just fast on paper; it lines up with the game’s tech stack in a way that should translate into smoother 4K play and fewer compromises. For players eyeing a high-end machine that can handle current and upcoming games, this is one of the cleaner hardware-and-software matches in the current deal cycle.

MSI Aegis Z2 RTX 5070 Ti Gaming PC for $1,850

The MSI Aegis Z2 RTX 5070 Ti gaming PC comes with an AMD Ryzen 7 8700F desktop processor, a GeForce RTX 5070 Ti graphics card, 32GB of DDR5-6000MHz RAM, and a 2TB PCIe 5.0 M.2 SSD. That’s a strong parts list for a prebuilt at $1,849.99, especially when you consider how often gaming PCs cut corners on memory or storage to hit a price point. Here, MSI avoids that trap, and buyers get the kind of headroom that keeps a system feeling quick after the novelty wears off.

The Ryzen 7 8700F is an 8-core, 16-thread Zen 4 CPU with a max boost clock of 5GHz, and that combination should keep games from stalling behind the GPU. In practical terms, it means the RTX 5070 Ti won’t spend its time waiting on the processor, which is exactly what you want in a prebuilt aimed at high-refresh and high-resolution play. The 32GB of DDR5-6000MHz RAM and 2TB PCIe 5.0 M.2 SSD round that out with enough memory for modern games and enough storage to avoid the usual “delete something before you install something else” routine.