ASUS ASUS ROG Gaming Desktop, Intel Core i7-13700KF, Review

The ASUS ROG gaming desktop packs an insane 64GB of RAM. We found it's less of a gaming beast and more of a multitasking powerhouse for creators who game on the side.

CPU Intel Core i7 13700KF
RAM 64 GB
Storage 2 TB
GPU NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070
Form Factor Tower
OS Windows 11 Pro
ASUS ASUS ROG Gaming Desktop, Intel Core i7-13700KF, desktop
79.3 Totaalscore

The 30-Second Version

This is a workstation disguised as a gaming PC. The 64GB of RAM is glorious overkill. Buy it if you render videos, not just headshots.

Overview

This ASUS ROG desktop is a spec sheet monster with a weird identity crisis. The one thing you need to know is that it's absolutely overkill for pure gaming, but it's a surprisingly solid pick if you're a streamer, video editor, or developer who also wants to game. With 64GB of RAM and a 2TB SSD, it's built for multitasking, not just maxing out Cyberpunk. The RTX 4070 is great, but it's the massive memory that steals the show here.

Performance

The performance is exactly what you'd expect from an i7-13700KF and RTX 4070 combo: fast and reliable. It'll crush 1440p gaming. What surprised us, looking at our database, is how the RAM and storage scores punch above their weight. The 64GB DDR5 lands in the 98th percentile, which is frankly absurd for a gaming PC at this price. That's workstation-level memory, and it makes this machine feel incredibly snappy when you have a game, a browser with 50 tabs, and a video render all going at once.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 85.3
GPU 78.4
RAM 97.5
Ports 67.4
Storage 86.7
Reliability 45.5
Social Proof 56.6

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • An insane 64GB of DDR5 RAM that future-proofs you for years. 98th
  • Great port selection, including multiple USB-C and display outputs. 87th
  • The RTX 4070 and i7 combo delivers excellent 1440p gaming performance. 85th
  • Comes with Windows 11 Pro, which is a nice bonus over the Home edition. 78th

Cons

  • For pure gaming, you're paying a premium for RAM you'll never fully use.
  • Some units have shipped with the wrong RAM type (DDR4 instead of DDR5), which is a major QC red flag.
  • At 9.98kg, it's a chonky boy and scores terribly for compactness.
  • The reliability percentile is just average, which lines up with the mixed build quality reports.

The Word on the Street

4.1/5 (17 reviews)
👍 Owners are blown away by how fast and quiet it is for demanding tasks like video editing and file conversion.
👎 There are several reports of units shipping with DDR4 RAM instead of the advertised DDR5, which is a serious bait-and-switch.
🤔 While most praise its out-of-the-box readiness and gaming performance, a few have faced major OS boot failures right from the start.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core i7 13700KF
Cores 16
Frequency 5.4 GHz
L3 Cache 30 MB

Graphics

GPU RTX 4070
Type discrete
VRAM 12 GB
VRAM Type GDDR6

Memory & Storage

RAM 64 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 2 TB
Storage Type SSD

Build

Form Factor Tower
Weight 10.0 kg / 22.0 lbs

Connectivity

HDMI HDMI
Wi-Fi WiFi 6

System

OS Windows 11 Pro

Value & Pricing

At $2300, the value proposition is niche. If you just want to play games, you can find a similar RTX 4070/i7 build with 32GB RAM for a couple hundred bucks less. But if your workflow genuinely needs 64GB of RAM for creative or development tasks, this pre-built starts to look like a pretty decent deal, saving you the hassle of sourcing parts and building it yourself.

vs Competition

Compared to the HP Omen 45L or Alienware Aurora R16, this ASUS offers more RAM and storage for the money. Those competitors might have flashier cases or better brand recognition for pure gaming, but they often skimp on memory to hit a price point. The Lenovo Legion Tower 5i is usually the budget king, but it typically comes with less RAM and a weaker CPU. This ASUS sits in a weird middle ground: it's not the cheapest gaming rig, nor the most powerful, but it's the one with the most headroom for heavy multitasking.

Spec ASUS ASUS ROG Gaming Desktop, Intel Core i7-13700KF, HP OMEN HP OMEN 45L Gaming Desktop, Intel Core Ultra 7 MSI MSI EdgeXpert-11SUS AI Supercomputer Dell Dell Tower Plus Desktop Computer Lenovo T Series Towers Legion Tower 5a Gen 10 (30L AMD) 90YJ001LUS Apple Mac Studio Apple - Mac Studio - M3 Ultra - 1TB SSD - Silver
CPU Intel Core i7 13700KF Intel Core Ultra 7 265K NVIDIA GB Intel Core Ultra 7 265 AMD Ryzen 7 7700X Apple M3 Ultra
RAM (GB) 64 32 128 32 32 96
Storage (GB) 2048 2048 4096 1024 2048 1000
GPU NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 NVIDIA NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Apple M3 Ultra 60-core
Form Factor Tower Desktop Mini Tower Tower -
Psu W - 850 240 750 850 -
OS Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Pro NVIDIA DGX OS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home macOS
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare

Common Questions

Q: Can it run modern games at high settings?

Absolutely. The RTX 4070 and i7-13700KF will handle any game at 1440p on high or ultra settings with high frame rates. It's a great 1440p gaming machine.

Q: Is 64GB of RAM overkill?

For just gaming? Yes, completely. 32GB is still the sweet spot. But if you're live-streaming, editing 4K video, or running virtual machines, you'll actually use that 64GB and love it.

Q: Does it have room for upgrades?

Yes, reviewers note it has extra SSD bays for easy storage expansion. The case is a standard tower, so you should have room for more drives or even a future GPU upgrade.

Who Should Skip This

If you're a pure gamer looking for the highest frames per dollar, skip this. You're subsidizing RAM you don't need. Go look at a similarly priced Alienware or a custom build that puts more budget into a better GPU, like an RTX 4070 Ti or 4080.

Verdict

We recommend this ASUS ROG desktop, but with a big caveat. It's not the best choice for a dedicated gamer. It's the right choice for a power user who games. The specs are fantastic for content creation, streaming, or software development. Just double-check your order the second it arrives to make sure you actually got the DDR5 RAM you paid for.