Seems in line with Acer's own refurbished price.
Within its small yet sharp confines, lays a monster. Unrestrained, unrelenting and always ready to strike, no matter the task, the Predator Orion 3000 delivers an awe-inspiring gaming experience that's second to none! The armor-covered design coupled with the ferociously powerful 8th Gen Intel...
acerrecertified.com
It has a 2080 and a 9700K but a PC with no glass side panel in the middle of it being a standard thing should be telling about component quality. This is why it has a solid side panel and why it's $1300:
The ram is bargain-bin 2666 DDR4, the mobo is a bargain-bin board, which might affect your ability to utilize the 9700K's ability to overclock and limit you in expansion. The tiny included CPU cooler won't handle an overclock anyways. The cables are worth in total about $1.20 in materials. There are only two case fans so passive cooling is pretty much non-existent. The HDD/tiny SSD is an issue especially since the OS will probably be on the SSD on a partition maybe leaving room for a couple games. For a 9700K and an RTX2080 500W is pushing it and there's no mention of the PSU brand or certification. The PSU is mounted at the very top of the case where there should be venting for all the heat that 2080 will generate. Speaking of the GPU, it will be just an inch above the floor of the case with no venting open to it to pull in cool air. The case is a $15 tin box with an Acer faceplate.
$1300 is cheap for a PC with a 9700K and a 2080, but all the other parts making up this PC will hinder both, especially once temps start going up. The cheap mobo will probably be the first thing to die on you.
I'd give it a hard pass.
If you're open for building, it's a great option. I'm the dumbest person I've ever met (even I agree on that) and I got it figured out. I threw this together pretty fast but it should give you an idea how much better overall a self-built system can be for the money. You could probably find some of the components cheaper, and you might prefer to swap out some parts I picked. The site itself is really easy to use and will find the parts you need with links to the sites and stores that sell them with pricing listed. It also warns you of compatibility issues as you piece a build together.
pcpartpicker.com
You said you wanted Intel so that's what I chose, but you can save a lot by going with a Ryzen CPU/mobo in the same price range at the expense of a little gaming performance. I'm not partial to either.
I went Intel 10600K on a Z490 mobo with two M.2 slots. A large air cooler because better cooling is better. I personally prefer AIO, but AIO costs considerably more. Went up to 32GB 3200 DDR4 because 16GB will be the minimum soon, you'll have 2 free slots to expand to 64GB later if you want to. I put a 250GB M.2 NVMe drive to use as an OS drive, and another 1TB M.2 NVMe drive for games and storage (suggest an external brick for bulk storage). I picked an EVGA 2070 Super in place of the 2080 which for the mast part performs the same for less money, especially if it's getting better cooling. Finally I picked a simple Phanteks Eclipse Mid-ATX case with plenty of good airflow and a basement for the PSU and cable management. Speaking of cables, the PSU I picked is modular and comes with all the cables you need to get started. You won't get the SATA cables but you also don't need them for the M.2 drives. The case only comes with one rear fan, so I tossed in 3 Fractal Venturi HF14 fans that move a massive amount of air and are still really quiet. You can get Windows 10 keys off ebay for $10, and pick your out mouse and keyboard because that's completely personal taste.
This will perform better than the Acer. It will run cooler, you'll be able to overclock, and your storage will be an order of magnitude faster. It's a bit more money, doesn't come with a mouse and keyboard and you have to put it together, but it's new, won't be loaded up with bloatware, and will be a blank slate for you to set up exactly how you want it.
With the 30 series cards having just launched, I'd keep my eye open for retards panic selling 2080tis and 2080S cards for $500. Just beware deals that seem to good to be true, because those deals have been mining bitcoins 24/7 for the last year.
If you don't want to build, there are a few decent builders out there that I'd go with over Acer, Dell, or really any of the off-the-shelf PC manufacturers. You have to keep in mind that they are wrapping their labor costs for assembly into the pricing, so to hit $1500, they will have to cut corners somewhere and even some of the more reputable builders have a tendency to forget to plug something in from time to time.