NVIDIA Thermaltake LCGS View 9870M-380 Gaming Desktop Review
The Thermaltake LCGS View 9870M-380 is a stunning glass showpiece with a great GPU, but its underperforming CPU makes it a tough sell for serious gamers. At $2,200, you're paying for the look.
The 30-Second Version
Buy this if you want a stunning glass showpiece for your room. For pure gaming performance per dollar, look elsewhere. The RTX 5070 is great, but the rest of the specs don't justify the $2,200 price tag.
Overview
The Thermaltake LCGS View 9870M-380 is a gaming desktop that puts all its chips on the table, and that table is made of glass. The one thing you need to know? It's a showpiece first, a powerhouse second. You're paying a premium for that dual-chamber, edge-to-edge tempered glass aesthetic, and the specs inside are solid but not class-leading. The RTX 5070 and 32GB of DDR5 are great, but that AMD 9800X CPU lands in a surprisingly low 32nd percentile in our database, which tells you this rig is built more for looks than all-out, no-compromise performance.
Performance
The performance story here is a bit of a mixed bag, and the CPU is the surprise letdown. For a $2,200 machine with a fancy 360mm liquid cooler, we expected the AMD 9800X to be a monster. Instead, its benchmark scores put it in the bottom third of comparable chips. The GPU is the star, with the RTX 5070 hitting the 83rd percentile, so your games will look fantastic. But that CPU bottleneck means you might not be hitting the ultra-high frame rates in CPU-intensive titles that you'd expect at this price. The 2TB SSD and 32GB of RAM are excellent, no complaints there.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Strong ram (90th percentile) 90th
- Strong storage (85th percentile) 85th
- Strong gpu (82th percentile) 82th
- Strong social proof (68th percentile) 68th
Cons
- Below average reliability (20th percentile) 20th
The Word on the Street
Specifications
Full Specifications
Processor
| CPU | AMD Ryzen 7 9800X |
| Cores | 1 |
| Frequency | 4.7 GHz |
| L3 Cache | 96 MB |
Graphics
| GPU | RTX 5070 |
| Type | discrete |
| VRAM | 12 GB |
| VRAM Type | GDDR7 |
Memory & Storage
| RAM | 32 GB |
| RAM Generation | DDR5 |
| Storage | 2 TB |
| Storage Type | SSD |
Build
| Form Factor | Tower |
| Weight | 15.0 kg / 33.0 lbs |
Connectivity
| Wi-Fi | WiFi 6 |
System
| OS | Windows 11 |
Value & Pricing
At $2,200, the value proposition is tough. You're not getting the best performance for your money. A significant chunk of the cost is wrapped up in that flashy glass case and the liquid cooling setup. If pure frames-per-dollar is your metric, there are better deals out there. This is for someone who values the visual spectacle as much as the gaming performance.
vs Competition
Compared directly, the HP Omen 45L often delivers better-balanced specs for similar money, with a stronger focus on CPU and GPU synergy. The Alienware Aurora R16 is another key competitor; it usually has better thermal engineering (despite the looks) and often better reliability scores, though you'll pay the 'Alienware tax'. If you want a clean, pre-built with less flash and more consistent performance, the Lenovo Legion Tower series typically offers better value by cutting the aesthetic frills and putting the budget into the core components.
| Spec | NVIDIA Thermaltake LCGS View 9870M-380 Gaming Desktop | HP OMEN HP OMEN 45L Gaming Desktop, Intel Core Ultra 7 | MSI MSI - EdgeXpert Mini Desktop - Arm 20 core - 128GB | Dell Dell Tower Plus Desktop Computer | Lenovo Lenovo Legion T7 34IAS10 90Y6003JUS Gaming Desktop | CLX CLX - Horus Gaming Desktop - AMD Ryzen 9 9950X - |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CPU | AMD Ryzen 7 9800X | Intel Core Ultra 7 265K | ARM | Intel Core Ultra 7 265 | Intel Core Ultra 9 285K | AMD Ryzen 9 9950X |
| RAM (GB) | 32 | 32 | 128 | 32 | 64 | 96 |
| Storage (GB) | 2048 | 2048 | 4096 | 1024 | 2048 | 10048 |
| GPU | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 | NVIDIA Graphics | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 |
| Form Factor | Tower | Desktop | Mini | Tower | Tower | Mid Tower |
| Psu W | - | 850 | 240 | 750 | - | 850 |
| OS | Windows 11 | Windows 11 Pro | NVIDIA DGX OS | Windows 11 Home | Windows 11 Pro | Windows 11 Home |
Common Questions
Q: Can this PC run 4K gaming?
The RTX 5070 can handle 4K, but not at max settings in the latest AAA titles. For a smooth 4K experience, you'd want a more powerful GPU and a much stronger CPU than what's in here.
Q: Is the liquid cooling necessary?
With the components they chose, not really. The 360mm cooler is overkill for the 9800X CPU. It's more for the 'premium build' aesthetic and to keep the glass case from turning into an oven.
Q: How future-proof is it?
The 32GB of RAM and 2TB SSD are fantastic for the future. The GPU is solid. The CPU is the main limitation—it's already the bottleneck today, so it'll hold you back sooner than other parts.
Who Should Skip This
If you're looking for the highest frame rates and best performance at a $2,200 budget, this isn't it. Go get an HP Omen 45L or build a custom PC with a better CPU/GPU balance. Also, if you ever need to move your PC, skip this—it's a 33-pound glass tank.
Verdict
We can only recommend the Thermaltake LCGS View 9870M-380 if your top priority is having the best-looking PC on your desk. It's a gorgeous set piece with a very good GPU. But for serious gamers who care more about performance metrics than aesthetics, the underperforming CPU and questionable reliability metrics make this a hard sell. You're buying a show car, not a track monster.