Considering the original RTX 4080 came out at a stonking $1,200 when it launched, the fact you can now pick up an upgraded graphics card in a gaming PC that costs under $2,000 is pretty damned impressive. Sure, the newer card did rectify some of Nvidia's original hubris by pulling the price back to a more reasonable (though still painfully high) $999 despite having an improved spec, but we've not seen gaming PC deals for the second-tier Nvidia GPU better than this.
You can find the card inside the where there's $400 slashed off the original $2,400 price tag.
There are obviously concessions ABS has made to hit this price point, however, and that's clear in the choice of CPU and level of SSD storage. You're getting AMD's mid-range Ryzen 7 7700X as the processor—an eight-core, 16-thread Zen 4 that's a reliable workhorse and little more—and just one terabyte of storage space. When you're spending that much cash you'd arguably want something in the 2 TB realm.
You are also not getting the full PCIe 5.0 monty that AMD's platform can offer as ABS is packing an MSI B650 motherboard into the Thermaltake chassis. That means no PCIe graphics slots or SSD M.2 ports, either. Right now, that's not a big miss as Gen5 SSDs offer little more than some shiny benchmark numbers and a severe increase in heat generation, and graphics cards are barely using the full bandwidth of the PCIe Gen4 interface. But it is a pretty barebones motherboard, all that aside.
You're also getting a full 1,000 W power supply into the mix, too. Though it is only listed as a generic ABS power supply with the exact provenance of its power delivering tech not clear. That is still enough juice to keep the RTX 4080 Super fed, and should see you right for the next GPU generation... so long as they don't start getting really silly when it comes to their power demands.
If you'd rather go down the Intel route—and who wouldn't with at the moment—there's an equivalently priced RTX 4080 Super gaming PC with an Intel Core i7 13700F inside it. That is a 16-core, 24-thread chip, so has a little more about it than the Ryzen 7 7700X, but the Yeyian machine is otherwise very similar though with only an 850 W PSU, but a superior [[link]] three-year warranty.
Either one of these machines will deliver an excellent gaming experience, and it will be a while before you find this sort of performance for less, I would bet.