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A sleek black minitower tinged with Nordic frost and pulsing RGB, the ASGARD A78X3D.32.S10.57.5813 arrives in the mid-range gaming PC market with a promise: bring current high-performance gaming and productivity to the masses without breaking the bank. Yet behind its mystical branding and balanced spec sheet, what does this configuration offer to today’s PC gamer and multitasker? In an era dominated by dizzying flagship launches and constant GPU shortages, the ASGARD attempts a more grounded approach by focusing on proven silicon and a few thoughtful features while trimming away excess.

Nordic Design in a Modern Minitower​

The first impression of the ASGARD is measured, not ostentatious. The computer ships in an unadorned cardboard box—practical, sufficient for safe travel, but a far cry from custom-branded unboxing extravaganzas. Inside you’ll find the essentials: power cable, documentation, screws, and small accessories safely nestled in foam. There are no fancy cable ties or bonus stickers here, but the essentials for assembly and installation land right out of the gate.
The case itself—a 1stPlayer Mi2-A minitower—embraces a modern aesthetic: compact, black, with a tempered glass side panel offering a full view of the neatly routed cables and illuminated components. Cable management is evidently a priority, boosting both airflow and style. RGB lighting can be controlled via ASUS’s proprietary software or with a simple case button, giving users a choice between automation and tactile control.
Unfortunately, there are compromises. The front panel omits USB Type-C altogether—modern users with external SSDs or newer smartphones will have to hunt for accessible rear motherboard ports or reach for dongles. Available connections up front boil down to two USB ports (one 3.0 and one 2.0), a combined headphone/mic jack, power, and reset buttons. This is a minor, but increasingly noticeable, omission in 2025.

Core Hardware: Where the Magic Happens​

Processor and Motherboard​

At the heart of the ASGARD is the AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D, a Zen 4 processor renowned for its blend of high core count, 3D V-Cache, and impressive efficiency. Geekbench, Cinebench, and Blender scores highlight the chip’s prowess both in gaming and multicore productivity:
  • Cinebench R23: 1178 single, 17,752 multi-core
  • Geekbench 6: 2639 single, 13,136 multi-core
  • Blender CPU: 263.2 seconds, GPU: 6201
This places the ASGARD in the upper echelon of mid-range platforms, consistently outperforming many Core i7 and non-3D Ryzen alternatives in both heavily threaded workloads and gaming, courtesy of the huge 3D cache.
The Asus PRIME B650M-A WIFI II motherboard underpins the build with a sensible mix of future-proofing and value. Key specs include:
  • PCIe 5.0 support for GPUs
  • USB 3.2 Gen2 (at the rear, if not up front)
  • Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2
  • Dual free RAM slots, a vacant M.2 slot
  • Sturdy VRM heatsinks (though a notch below flagship levels)
Still, not all choices are flawless. The Wi-Fi antenna, while functional, is a wobbly, lightweight affair without a magnetic base—a curious cost-saving measure that hinders everyday usability. Competing boards at this price occasionally include more robust solutions.

RAM and Storage​

Memory comes from a pair of G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB DDR5-6000 sticks (2Ă—16GB), fitted with striking heatsinks and addressable lighting. Running in dual-channel with EXPO enabled, they deliver up to 59,422 MB/s read and over 81,000 MB/s write in synthetic benchmarks. The kit proves stable even during punishing multitasking and content creation, giving ample headroom for gaming, 4K video editing, and even more demanding creative tasks.
For local storage, Kingston’s SNV3S/1000G NVMe SSD steps up with PCIe 4.0×4 bandwidth and real-world speeds exceeding 6,000 MB/s read and 5,500 MB/s write. While brisk, modern gaming means titles like Call of Duty or Microsoft Flight Simulator can chew up over 150GB each; with a mere 1TB on offer, users will quickly yearn for more. The second M.2 slot softens the blow and enables easy upgrades, though buyers should factor in the potential need for more space right from the start.

Graphics: RTX 5070’s Balanced Punch​

The centerpiece in gaming performance is the Asus GeForce RTX 5070 Prime OC, wielding 12GB of fresh GDDR7 VRAM, AV1 encoding, and all the AI trimmings of current-gen NVIDIA silicon. According to verified benchmarks:
  • 3DMark Time Spy Extreme: 9505
  • 3DMark Port Royal: 14,285
  • 3DMARK Speed Way: 5719
In practice, this equates to butter-smooth Quad HD (1440p) performance on ultra settings for nearly all mainstream titles, and surprisingly decent 4K numbers provided the user is judicious with in-game texture settings and leverages DLSS 4 with Frame Generation where possible.
Specific gaming test results reinforce the ASGARD’s versatility:
  • S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2 (UE5): 63 fps @1440p native, over 100 fps with Frame Generation; 26+ fps @4K native, but easily boosted to playable levels with DLSS and image quality tweaks.
  • DOOM: The Dark Ages: 67+ fps @1440p native max, exceeding 200 with Frame Generation; 120-125 fps in 4K with settings lowered and DLSS enabled.
  • God of War Ragnarök: Holds steady at 125 fps in 4K with Frame Generation—demonstrating that even cinematic next-gen console ports are within reach.
The 12GB VRAM, while adequate for today’s AAA games at 1440p, will hit its ceiling faster in 4K or with heavy mods. Notably, for older games like The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered, the hardware is almost overkill—even with updated visuals.

Cooling and Acoustic Performance​

Keeping thermals in check is a 240mm DeepCool LQ AIO liquid cooler with dual 120mm fans. The head unit features a built-in display for real-time CPU temperatures and system vitals—a nifty addition for enthusiasts. Stress tests never pushed the Ryzen 7 7800X3D beyond 79°C (games usually kept it under 65°C), while the GPU sat comfortably between 60–65°C even in marathons.
Acoustically, the system is impressively restrained:
  • Idle/desktop: 28–30 dB (akin to a modern laptop)
  • Gaming/load: 39–41 dB (barely noticeable)
  • No coil whine from the DeepCool PF750 (750W, 80 PLUS certified PSU), with passive and semi-passive modes working as intended
Dust management is user-friendly, with easily removable filters and plenty of ventilation points. The only real caveat is that the small case will challenge users looking to install physically huge GPUs or multiple hard drives.

Software Experience​

ASGARD’s inclusion of Windows 11 Enterprise LTSC Evaluation is a double-edged sword. On one hand, it’s ready to use out of the box with smart defaults; on the other, the 90-day trial means users must either buy a full license or sidestep legal constraints down the line. Update management and security are largely automated—ASUS Driver Hub automates core drivers, and bundled software like Armory Crate and DeepCool’s utility allow for fan tuning, RGB control, and simple BIOS updates. OCCT comes pre-installed for stress testing and hardware monitoring.
Optionally, users can explore Norton for anti-virus protection with another 60-day trial. Altogether, this is a considered approach for less technical buyers, but those wanting a longer-term OS solution need to plan ahead.

Real-World Everyday Performance​

In daily use, the ASGARD rarely skips a beat. Boot time is under 10 seconds, multitasking is effortless (even with dozens of Chrome tabs, video streaming, and background downloads), and resource-intensive tasks in Adobe Premiere Pro or DaVinci Resolve proceed without a hitch.
The synthetic benchmark results (Speedometer 3.1: 36.3; WebXPRT 4: 380; Google Octane Multi Core: 873,378) reflect a highly competitive platform in both responsiveness and heavy multi-tasking. No system freezes or blue screens were encountered throughout testing—an increasingly rare badge of honor.
Network connectivity is robust, courtesy of the Wi-Fi 6 module and Bluetooth 5.2—no nagging dropouts or lag were detected, and external peripherals paired seamlessly.

Energy Consumption, Cooling, and Noise​

Gaming and workstation loads draw between 420–450 watts, aligning with power consumption expectations for this hardware class:
  • GPU: Peak consumption 220–250 watts
  • CPU: Rarely over 120 watts
In lighter office tasks, power draw drops as low as 120–140 watts, and at idle is a modest 50–70 watts. These numbers put the ASGARD at the efficient frontier of current-gen midrange builds, helped by AMD’s mature 5nm process in the Ryzen 7 7800X3D and the proven 80 PLUS-rated PSU.
Noise and thermal performance are standout positives. Even at sustained 100% loads, the system hums quietly and avoids the jet-engine acoustics sometimes found in compact builds. The DeepCool PF750 shows none of the high-pitched whine associated with cheaper units.

Strengths and Shortcomings​

What the ASGARD Does Right​

  • Balanced Gaming and Productivity: The pairing of a Ryzen 7 7800X3D with RTX 5070 achieves a sweet spot: 1440p gaming at ultra settings is nearly universal; even 4K is reasonable with some settings tweaks.
  • Modern Platform: DDR5, PCIe 5.0, Wi-Fi 6, GDDR7 graphics memory, and DLSS 4 bring tangible future-proofing.
  • Thermals and Noise: Cool and quiet under both load and idle—ideal for users working or gaming into late hours.
  • Expandability: Two open RAM slots and an extra M.2 port make upgrades feasible.
  • Software Out-of-the-Box: Drivers, monitoring utilities, and RGB control require minimal user configuration.

Areas of Concern​

  • Storage Is Limiting: 1TB NVMe may be “average,” but is inadequate for modern game libraries. Expansion is all but mandatory for enthusiasts.
  • No Front USB-C: This decision makes charging and fast data transfer less convenient.
  • Wi-Fi Antenna Feels Cheap: A non-magnetic, unstable antenna impacts both signal stability and aesthetics.
  • Temporary Windows License: A 90-day OS evaluation will inconvenience users who expect a perpetually licensed system.
  • Compact Case = Restricted Upgradability: Installing a second HDD or oversized GPU could be tricky, limiting future-proofing for hardware tinkerers.

Competitive Landscape and Value Proposition​

ASGARD’s price sits at UAH 79,799, positioning it among the higher end of midrange pre-builts. Several direct competitors jostle for attention:
  • HEXO Gaming RTX5070 Pro (UAH 77,799): Swaps in a Ryzen 7 7700, with the same GPU at a lower price. Potentially lower multi-threaded performance, but worth comparing for strictly gaming purposes.
  • EVOLVE GamePart Gold 4B (UAH 83,999): Utilizes Intel’s Core i5-14600KF and RTX 5070. Higher CPU frequencies, but without the cache advantage or gaming focus of the Ryzen 7 7800X3D.
  • EVOLVE GamePart Gold B (UAH 87,799): Sports an RX 9070 XT (16GB VRAM) for maximum performance but incurs a significant markup, and less mature ray tracing/DLSS support.
Compared internationally, these configurations represent a fair middle ground in price-to-performance for 2025, though each brand’s after-sales support and accessory pack-in will affect long-term value.

Critical Analysis: Is the ASGARD the Right Choice?​

The ASGARD A78X3D.32.S10.57.5813 doesn’t aim to reinvent the midrange PC, but rather to perfect the formula. Its biggest draw is a careful selection of current-gen components that sidestep the cost bloat of flagships while delivering on what most users actually need: fast gaming at 1440p, legitimate multi-core muscle for work, and genuine expandability.
For gamers, the RTX 5070’s 12GB VRAM and DLSS 4 support mean smooth play in modern titles today, but some caution is warranted for ambitious 4K/ultra-modded play with games to come. The Ryzen 7 7800X3D, meanwhile, remains the gold standard in “post-flagship” gaming CPUs, offering more than enough performance for any current or near-future game engine alongside productivity demands.
Thermal and acoustic performance is exceptional, thanks to the DeepCool AIO and intelligent chassis ventilation. Most competing builds in this price bracket run hotter and noisier out of the box.
However, some cost-saving measures hurt the day-to-day UX. The lack of front panel USB-C is a frustrating omission for a modern build expected to last years. The budget Wi-Fi antenna and modest packaging are likewise points of friction for users who demand the “premium” experience advertised by the Nordic theme.
On the software side, only a 90-day Windows trial is included—users must factor a legitimate OS license into their real budget if they want to avoid legal ambiguity.
Storage limitations, while common among budget-conscious PCs, are especially pronounced as games and media balloon in size. Some users will be forced to add a second SSD almost immediately.
For tinkerers and upgraders, the compact case could limit options, though for most buyers in this segment, the included hardware is compelling enough to put off those concerns for a couple of years.

Conclusion: The Heart of Mid-Range Gaming, Chilled by Nordic Winds​

The ASGARD A78X3D.32.S10.57.5813 is the rare pre-built PC that’s greater than the sum of its parts. Demure in packaging but robust in capability, it applies proven hardware and thoughtful engineering to deliver a modern, visually arresting gaming desktop suited for both competitive esports and creative professionals on a budget. It doesn’t offer everything, but it balances cost and quality in a way that will suit the overwhelming majority of mainstream PC gamers in 2025—provided they can overlook some minor but nagging omissions.
If you demand the fastest, flashiest, most upgradable machine, you may find room to quibble over ports and case size. But if your priority is strong 1440p/4K performance, silent running, and a touch of contemporary style—all without surging into flagship pricing territory—the ASGARD stands as a rarefied oasis in the midrange market. Not perfect, but perfectly appropriate.
Final Rating: 8/10 – A smart, well-cooled, and balanced gaming PC for discerning mainstream buyers who value performance over posturing, yet can forgive an imperfect port selection and modest base storage.

Source: ITC.ua ASGARD gaming PC review: a balanced mid-range with a Nordic character