Lenovo has launched the Bellator Feng 7000X, a desktop aimed at mainstream gamers who want a ready-made 1080p or 1440p machine without building one themselves. The line starts at 5,499 yuan ($800) for an RTX 3050 model and rises to 6,999 yuan for a version with an RTX 5060 Ti, with Intel or AMD platform choices on offer.
That pricing puts Lenovo in the familiar sweet spot for prebuilt gaming PCs: attractive on the shelf, less charming once you compare the spec sheet with what buyers could assemble on their own. Still, the company is clearly betting that convenience, warranty support, and a compact case will do enough of the selling.
Lenovo Bellator Feng 7000X configurations
The Bellator Feng 7000X comes in three versions. Buyers can pick Intel Core 5 205H or AMD Ryzen 5 5600G in the higher trims, while the cheapest model uses an RTX 3050 and the top configuration goes up to an RTX 5060 Ti. Every version ships with 16 GB of DDR4 memory and a 512 GB SSD, which is fine for a starter gaming box and a little stingy if you install a modern library of giant games.
- Entry model: 5,499 yuan ($800), RTX 3050
- Higher model: 6,999 yuan, RTX 5060 Ti, Intel or AMD choice
- Common specs: 16 GB DDR4, 512 GB SSD
A 25-litre case built for transport
Lenovo says the 25-litre chassis is made from SGCC steel and reinforced at key points, with a bracket for the graphics card to reduce stress during shipping and daily use. That sounds mundane, but it is exactly the kind of thing that matters in a desktop sold through retail channels, where a bent GPU is a very expensive way to learn about physics.
Cooling uses a side air-intake layout with support for up to three fans. The case fits CPU coolers up to 136 mm tall and graphics cards up to 290 mm long, or 305 mm if the front fans are removed. That keeps the system relatively compact, though it also makes clear this is not a sprawling enthusiast tower stuffed with endless upgrade room.
Ports and wireless are covered
On the connectivity side, Lenovo includes USB 3.2 and USB 2.0 ports, gigabit Ethernet, audio jacks, Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.3. The graphics cards themselves provide DisplayPort and HDMI, so the system is ready for the usual mix of monitors and TVs without hunting for adapters on day one.
The Bellator Feng 7000X is already on sale in China, and the pitch is obvious: a lower-friction path into PC gaming at a price that stays below many custom builds. The harder question is whether buyers will accept DDR4 and a 512 GB SSD as a sensible compromise, or treat them as the sort of cost-cutting that looks clever until the first game install fills the drive.

