Lenovo has rolled out the Bellator Feng 7000X in China, a pre-built desktop that brings RTX 50-series graphics to a mid-range PC. The pitch is simple: Intel or AMD CPUs, Nvidia graphics up to the RTX 5060 Ti, and a chassis designed for buyers who want a standard 1080p or 1440p gaming machine without turning the first weekend into a cable-management hobby.

The Lenovo Bellator Feng 7000X also arrives as rivals keep stuffing their desktops with AI branding and party tricks, which makes Lenovo’s more practical approach feel almost rebellious. For buyers who want a ready-made tower that can play modern games and still leave room for upgrades later, this is a more conventional option than many of the sealed mini-PC alternatives on the market.

Lenovo Bellator Feng 7000X pricing

The lineup starts at 5,499 yuan ($812) for a model with an Intel Core 5 205H and an Nvidia RTX 3050. A step up to 6,999 yuan ($1,034) swaps in an RTX 5060 Ti, and Lenovo says that version can be paired with either the Intel Core 5 205H or an AMD Ryzen 5 5600G.

  • Base model: 5,499 yuan ($812) – Intel Core 5 205H, Nvidia RTX 3050
  • RTX 5060 Ti model: 6,999 yuan ($1,034) – Intel Core 5 205H or AMD Ryzen 5 5600G
  • Memory: 16GB DDR4
  • Storage: 512GB PCIe solid-state drive

That mix is interesting because it is not trying to chase the flashiest specs list in the room. Lenovo is clearly aiming at buyers who want a ready-made tower that can play modern games and still leave room for upgrades later, instead of forcing them into a locked-down mini-PC compromise.

Lenovo Bellator Feng 7000X case and cooling

The Bellator Feng 7000X uses a 25-liter chassis measuring 374 x 170 x 393mm, built from 0.8mm SGCC galvanized steel panels. Lenovo says the motherboard tray, rear panel, and side panels are thickened to 1mm for added rigidity, and it includes a GPU support bracket to reduce strain during transport and over time. That is the sort of unglamorous detail that matters once a desktop has been bounced around by delivery services.

Cooling is handled by what Lenovo calls its Hurricane thermal architecture, with side intake airflow and support for up to three fans: two 120mm units in front and one 90mm at the rear. The case fits CPU coolers up to 136mm tall and graphics cards up to 290mm long, or 305mm if the front fans are removed.

Lenovo Bellator Feng 7000X ports and wireless support

Expansion is modest but sensible. Lenovo includes a dual-layer drive cage for one 3.5-inch drive and one 2.5-inch drive, plus two USB 3.2 Gen 1 ports on the front. Around back, there are four USB 3.2 Gen 1 ports, four USB 2.0 ports, a Gigabit Ethernet port, and three audio jacks. The discrete graphics cards provide three DisplayPort connections and one HDMI port.

  • Wireless: Wi-Fi 6
  • Bluetooth: 5.3
  • Memory: 16GB DDR4
  • Storage: 512GB PCIe SSD

Lenovo has not built a spec monster here, and that is probably the point. The 7000X looks aimed at buyers who want a dependable desktop with clear upgrade paths, while the broader market keeps drifting toward thinner, quieter, more sealed systems. If Lenovo keeps this formula priced aggressively, expect it to be far more appealing than the company’s marketing department would like to admit.

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