Lenovo's Bellator Blade 7000 packs RTX 5060 Ti for $1,250 — but only in China
Lenovo has launched the Lecoo Bellator Blade 7000 gaming desktop in China starting at $1,206, with an RTX 5060 Ti configuration priced at $1,250. That's roughly 40% cheaper than comparable prebuilt PCs on sale in the US and UK right now — and there's no Western launch in sight.
A Motorola in Legion clothing
The Bellator Blade 7000 runs on Intel's Core Ultra 5 230F — a 10-core chip boosting to 5.0 GHz with 24MB of cache — paired with either an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060 or RTX 5060 Ti. Both GPUs are built on Nvidia's Blackwell architecture with 8GB of GDDR7 memory and support for DLSS 4 upscaling and Reflex 2 latency reduction. Every configuration ships with 24GB of DDR5 RAM and either a 512GB or 1TB PCIe SSD, all powered by a 500W PSU.
The chassis is galvanized steel with a glass side panel and RGB lighting. It supports GPU cards up to 390mm long (420mm without front fans), CPU coolers up to 165mm tall, and 360mm AIO liquid cooling — giving it real upgrade headroom for a prebuilt.

The Lecoo Bellator Blade 7000 features a glass side panel, RGB lighting, and a chassis designed with upgrade flexibility in mind.
Connectivity includes Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2, Gigabit Ethernet, USB 3.2 ports front and rear, and standard audio I/O. Sales in China begin May 13, per Gizmochina.
The price gap is real, but so is the catch
In the US, comparable RTX 5060 Ti prebuilts — from Alienware, HP OMEN, and Lenovo's own Legion line — are listed on Best Buy RTX 5060 Ti desktops for $1,899 to $2,789. The Bellator's Chinese price is striking by comparison.
The problem: the Core Ultra 5 230F is a China-exclusive CPU. It doesn't exist in Western retail channels. Tom's Hardware has shown the 230F matches the Core Ultra 5 245K in gaming despite drawing just 65W versus 125W — but that efficiency win stays in China for now.
Lenovo hasn't announced US, UK, or EU availability for the Bellator Blade 7000. The Lecoo sub-brand has no visible presence in Western markets, and none of the major US or UK retailers list the product. If a Western version does arrive, expect a different CPU and likely a higher price tag. For now, this one's worth watching — not buying.