From cars and motorcycles to boats and bikes, discover top deals to upgrade your transport game.
Find your dream home, investment property, or rental space across the globe.
Connect with professionals and services to meet all your business and personal needs.
Latest gadgets, computers, smartphones, and tech accessories at unbeatable prices.
Discover luxury brands, streetwear, and everyday fashion for the whole family.
Everything for your home, garden, hobbies and leisure activities.
Explore hobbies, leisure activities, and creative pursuits for all ages.
Everything you need for your furry, feathered, and scaled companions.
Discover unique art pieces, collectibles, and timeless antiques.
Amazing bargains and special offers updated daily just for you.
Huge discounts on overstocked items. Don't miss these incredible clearance deals!
Essential products and services for babies, toddlers, and parents.
Whether you’re leaving Thailand, switching to a laptop, or just decluttering, selling a complete gaming setup in 2026 can either fund your next move – or disappear in a lowball offer. Many expats list their PC, monitor and peripherals with random prices and then wonder why nobody bites.
The goal is not to “get back what you paid” – it is to find the real 2026 market value in Thailand and sell fast without feeling ripped off. Treat this guide as your valuation playbook: we’ll break down how to price your PC and components, realistic depreciation in THB, which parts hold value, and how to structure listings on Bangkok and Thailand marketplaces so buyers take you seriously.
Thailand’s PC market in 2026 is in full swing: new RTX cards, 144 Hz monitors and gaming chairs are everywhere, with big chains offering constant promotions. That means your 2021 “beast” is now competing against cheaper, faster pre‑built rigs and refurbished systems – especially in Bangkok.
If you price too high, your listing dies on page 3 of search results; price too low, and you’re basically donating your GPU to a stranger. 🌶️ Spicy Tip: Treat your gaming setup like a used car – buyers don’t care what you paid, they care what similar systems are selling for this week in Thailand.
Before talking numbers, you need a clear inventory. “Gaming PC + stuff” is not a product; “Ryzen 5 + RTX 3060 desktop with 27” 144 Hz monitor and HyperX headset” is. In 2026, Thai buyers – especially in Bangkok and Chiang Mai – are more tech‑savvy than many expats think.
🌶️ Spicy Tip: Make a simple spreadsheet or note with every component, brand, model, purchase year and original price in THB. You’ll use this both to calculate and to write your listing.
Different parts of your gaming setup lose value at different speeds. GPUs and monitors hold value better than cases or basic keyboards. Below is a synthetic 2026 depreciation table to help you estimate a fair resale percentage vs what your items cost new.
| Component Type | Age (Years) | Typical Resale % of Original Price (2026) | Notes for Thailand Market |
|---|---|---|---|
| GPU (graphics card) | 1–2 years | 60–75% | High demand if still relevant (e.g. 3060/3070/4060+). |
| GPU | 3–5 years | 35–55% | Still sellable for 1080p/1440p gaming, price sharply. |
| CPU + Motherboard | 1–3 years | 50–70% | Better if current socket & DDR5/DDR4 mainstream. |
| RAM & SSD | 1–3 years | 50–65% | Capacity matters more than age (16–32 GB / 1–2 TB sells well). |
| Case & PSU | 2–5 years | 25–45% | Premium PSU brands hold better; “no‑name” drops hard. |
| Monitor (144 Hz gaming) | 1–3 years | 55–70% | Higher refresh and IPS panels hold value best. |
| Keyboard, Mouse, Headset | 1–3 years | 35–60% | Top brands (Logitech, Razer, HyperX) sell easier. |
| Gaming Chair / Desk | 1–4 years | 30–55% | Condition & cleanliness are everything in Thailand’s climate. |
🌶️ Spicy Tip: Start with these percentages as your ceiling, then check real listings in Thailand – if similar builds sit unsold, you’re too high.
Now that you know how parts typically depreciate, it’s time to build your actual price. The mistake most expats make in 2026 is setting one big “emotional” number (“I want 40,000 THB back”) instead of calculating component by component.
🌶️ Spicy Tip: If you’re leaving Thailand soon, think in “time vs money” – bundling for a bit less can be smarter than chasing maximum THB with 15 separate buyers.
Imagine you bought a full setup in Thailand for ~60,000 THB in 2023: RTX mid‑range GPU, Ryzen 5 CPU, 16–32 GB RAM, 1 TB SSD, 27” 144 Hz monitor and decent peripherals. In early 2026, a typical fair breakdown might land you around 30,000–38,000 THB part‑out value if everything is clean and still current for 1080p/1440p gaming.
As a bundle, a realistic “sell within a few weeks” ask might be 26,000–32,000 THB depending on brand mix, condition and whether you include desk/chair. That’s your cue to forget about “but I paid 60K” and focus on what will actually move in the Thai market now.
Most sellers think that offering a “complete gaming setup” should be worth more because it’s convenient. In reality, buyers in Thailand 2026 often value the parts individually more than your bundle. A serious gamer might want your GPU and monitor but doesn’t care about your old keyboard or mid‑range headset. Families might like your monitor but don’t need a flashy case with RGB.
The psychological trap is overvaluing the convenience for the buyer and underestimating how different buyer segments are. When you insist on selling everything as one package at full “sum of parts,” you shrink your buyer pool and sit on your gear for months. The goal is not to force a perfect bundle; it’s to design 1–2 attractive bundles plus a few separate items that match how Thai buyers actually shop. 🌶️ Spicy Tip: If nobody wants your all‑in‑one offer after a few weeks, that’s your cue to split it into a “core PC + monitor” bundle and separate accessory listings.
Once you’ve set a realistic value, the way you present and position your gaming setup is what decides if it sells quickly or becomes a long‑term listing. Thailand’s 2026 gaming community is active – but also picky.
Your GPU and monitor usually drive the sale. In your title and first lines, mention these clearly: “RTX 3060 + 27” 144 Hz IPS – Ready to Play 1080p High” is far more powerful than “Gaming PC for Sale.”
🌶️ Spicy Tip: Think like a gamer scrolling on their phone: they want FPS and smooth screens, not a long story about why you’re leaving Thailand.
Many buyers in Bangkok and Chiang Mai care about practical performance more than raw component lists. Adding “Plays Apex / Valorant / GTA V at X FPS in 1080p/1440p” can make your listing feel real and justify your price.
Wipe dust, hide cable chaos, shoot in good light. Show any scratches honestly. Thai buyers (and expats) trust listings that don’t pretend the gear is perfect – they just want to know what they’re really getting for their THB.
Set your public price with room for typical Thai bargaining (5–15%), but know the exact lowest number you’re willing to accept before messages even start. That way you can answer quickly without emotional back‑and‑forth.
Ready to turn your tower, monitors and RGB gear into actual cash – not endless “still available?” messages? Use Pickeenoo to list your complete gaming setup where expats and local gamers actively look for quality second‑hand gear across Bangkok, Chiang Mai, Phuket and beyond.
🚀 Turn Your Old Gaming Rig Into Real Baht – Without Getting Lowballed
Post your full setup or split into smart bundles, add clear specs and photos, and connect with serious buyers who understand the value of a well‑built PC in Thailand 2026.
🌶️ List Your Gaming Setup on Pickeenoo
🌶️ Turn “I’ll Just Dump It Cheap” into “I Sold Smart and Paid for My Next Upgrade”: value each part, design smart bundles, and let Thailand’s gaming market in 2026 work in your favour instead of your buyer’s.