Skip to main content
PC Gamer PC Gamer THE GLOBAL AUTHORITY ON PC GAMES
flag of UK
UK
flag of US
US
flag of Canada
Canada
flag of Australia
Australia
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Games
  • Hardware
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Video
  • Forum
  • More
    • PC Gaming Show
    • Software
    • Movies & TV
    • Codes
    • Coupons
    • Magazine
    • Newsletter
    • Affiliate links
    • Meet the team
    • Community guidelines
    • About PC Gamer
PC Gamer Magazine Subscription
PC Gamer Magazine Subscription
Why subscribe?
  • Subscribe to the world's #1 PC gaming mag
  • Try a single issue or save on a subscription
  • Issues delivered straight to your door or device
From$32.49
Subscribe now
Popular
  • Battlefield 6
  • Essential Hardware
  • WoW Midnight
  • Silksong
  • Quizzes
Don't miss these
An iBuyPower and Acer gaming PC on a blue background
Gaming PCs You can still grab a high-end gaming PC for around $1,500 after October Prime Day, and you get your pick between AMD or Nvidia
Three gaming PC cases underneath badges showing the Editor's Pick, Best Value, and Ridiculous Power categories
Gaming PCs Best gaming PC builds: budget, mid-range and high-end recommendations
An air cooler from Noctua and a liquid cooler from Arctic on a blue background with the PC Gamer Recommended badge in the upper right.
Cooling Best CPU coolers in 2025: I've tested the latest liquid coolers and air coolers to find the very best for your CPU
Two PC cases on a yellow background with the PC Gamer recommends badge in the upper right corner.
PC Cases The best PC cases in 2025: These are the chassis I'd use for my next gaming build
Two of the best liquid coolers on a red background with the PC Gamer recommended logo in the top right.
Cooling Best liquid cooler for CPUs in 2025: I've tried all the best AIO coolers and these are my top picks
Minisforum AtomMan G7 PT mini PC and AtomMan Venus UM790 mini PCs
Gaming PCs Best mini PCs in 2025: The compact computers I love the most
The Velocity Micro Raptor ES40 and HP Omen 35L gaming PCs on a blue background with the PC Gamer recommended badge in the top right corner
Gaming PCs Best gaming PCs in 2025: these are the rigs and brands I recommend today
The best PC fans on a blue background with a PC Gamer recommended badge in the top right.
Cooling Best PC fans in 2025: I've put these case fans through their paces to find the coolest and quietest
Midas in Tokyo during the 2025 PC Gaming Show Tokyo Direct.
Games PC Gaming Show Tokyo Direct live coverage – all the reveals and trailers
MSI Vector 16 HX AI and Razer Blade 16 gaming laptops on a blue background with a PC Gamer logo in the foreground
Gaming Laptops Best gaming laptop 2025: I've tested the best laptops for gaming of this generation and here are the ones I recommend
Various bits of hardware float in the swirling pink PC G deal void.
Hardware 13 of the best post-Prime Day PC gaming deals still live and kicking today
Acer gaming PC with a pink background and a PC Gamer Recommended badge
Gaming PCs Walmart might have actually dropped the best Prime Day gaming PC deal: I give you an RTX 5080 rig with a 12-core Ryzen CPU wrapped up with a bow and a $1000 discount
An Acer Nitro 60 gaming PC on a pink deals background, with the PC Gamer recommended badge in the top right
Gaming PCs Hold up, a fully-specced RTX 5070 Ti gaming PC for under $1,500? The Prime Day deals really are kicking like a mule this year
AMD, Secretlab, Skytech, Zotac products composited on a pink gradient background
Hardware Best October Prime Day Deals Live — The best PC gaming hardware deals still live
An image of an ABS Eurus Ruby gaming PC, against a teal background with a white border
Gaming PCs Unless my eyes have been cheated by some spell, this is the cheapest RTX 5090 gaming PC with a 9800X3D I can find right now
  1. Hardware
  2. PC Cases

40 awesome custom rigs we saw at Computex

Features
By Wes Fenlon published 12 June 2015

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 1 of 43
Page 1 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 2 of 43
Page 2 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 3 of 43
Page 3 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 4 of 43
Page 4 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 5 of 43
Page 5 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 6 of 43
Page 6 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 7 of 43
Page 7 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 8 of 43
Page 8 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 9 of 43
Page 9 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 10 of 43
Page 10 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 11 of 43
Page 11 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 12 of 43
Page 12 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 13 of 43
Page 13 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 14 of 43
Page 14 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 15 of 43
Page 15 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 16 of 43
Page 16 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 17 of 43
Page 17 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 18 of 43
Page 18 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 19 of 43
Page 19 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 20 of 43
Page 20 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 21 of 43
Page 21 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 22 of 43
Page 22 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 23 of 43
Page 23 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 24 of 43
Page 24 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 25 of 43
Page 25 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 26 of 43
Page 26 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 27 of 43
Page 27 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 28 of 43
Page 28 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 29 of 43
Page 29 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 30 of 43
Page 30 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 31 of 43
Page 31 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 32 of 43
Page 32 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 33 of 43
Page 33 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 34 of 43
Page 34 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 35 of 43
Page 35 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 36 of 43
Page 36 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 37 of 43
Page 37 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 38 of 43
Page 38 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 39 of 43
Page 39 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 40 of 43
Page 40 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 41 of 43
Page 41 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 42 of 43
Page 42 of 43

At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, big tech companies use giant signs and walls of displays to draw passersby into their booths. At Computex in Taipei, they use computers. Computex truly is a show about and for the PC first and foremost. As I wandered the convention floor in Taipei's Nangang exhibit hall, I found that almost every company at the show caught my attention with the same tactic. The corners of booths were packed with amazing custom-built PCs, decked out with immaculate cable management, unique cases, flashing LEDs and glowing RAM.

Often these custom rigs were the work of case modders, who turned a once-boring case into a work of art. Others instead showcased exciting new cases with thousands of dollars of parts and intricate watercooling setups.

It didn't really matter what the booth was showcasing. What's the best way to sell a case? Build an awesome computer inside it. What's the best way to sell RAM? Put that RAM in an awesome computer. What's the best way to sell a power supply? Use it to run a bunch of graphics cards... in an awesome computer.

You get the point. One of the great treats of Computex was stopping every three minutes to snap a photo of another awesome rig. Here are 40 of them, in no particular order.

Page 43 of 43
Page 43 of 43
Wes Fenlon
Wes Fenlon
Social Links Navigation
Senior Editor

Wes has been covering games and hardware for more than 10 years, first at tech sites like The Wirecutter and Tested before joining the PC Gamer team in 2014. Wes plays a little bit of everything, but he'll always jump at the chance to cover emulation and Japanese games.


When he's not obsessively optimizing and re-optimizing a tangle of conveyor belts in Satisfactory (it's really becoming a problem), he's probably playing a 20-year-old Final Fantasy or some opaque ASCII roguelike. With a focus on writing and editing features, he seeks out personal stories and in-depth histories from the corners of PC gaming and its niche communities. 50% pizza by volume (deep dish, to be specific).

Read more
A Corsair Air 5400 PC case
The many-chambered PC cases at Gamescom really showed up my old banger of a chassis
 
 
A custom DIY walnut wooden ITX PC case by MXC Builds
If anything were to convince me to try out carpentry it would be this gorgeous DIY mini walnut PC case housing an Asus ProArt RTX 5080
 
 
A picture of a Terracotta painted Fractal Terra case
'I didn’t want just another black box', says hobbyist who customised their PC to look like an aged terracotta pot
 
 
Three PC cases on a pink background with the PC Gamer logo in the top right.
I'm surrounded by PC cases I've reviewed and these are the best PC case deals I'd go for this Prime Day
 
 
A gaming PC in the process of being built, using Radeon and Ryzen components and an Asus Pro Art PA401 PC case.
Moody and wooden, this PC and I have a lot in common: Asus ProArt Case PA401, Ryzen 7 9800X3D and RX 9070 XT build
 
 
A white gaming PC built using a Thermaltake PC case, Cooler Master fans, and an AMD CPU.
I've taken a proper bargain of a case from Thermaltake and built a gorgeous white PC with it
 
 
Latest in PC Cases
A custom DIY walnut wooden ITX PC case by MXC Builds
If anything were to convince me to try out carpentry it would be this gorgeous DIY mini walnut PC case housing an Asus ProArt RTX 5080
 
 
Three PC cases on a pink background with the PC Gamer logo in the top right.
I'm surrounded by PC cases I've reviewed and these are the best PC case deals I'd go for this Prime Day
 
 
The Hyte X50 PC case on a desk ready to be built into for testing and review.
Hyte X50 PC case review
 
 
The Havn BF 360 PC case in both black and white with panels removed.
Havn BF 360 PC case review
 
 
Corsair Frame 4500X ATX PC case throughout a PC build for testing.
Corsair Frame 4500X review
 
 
A gaming PC in the process of being built, using Radeon and Ryzen components and an Asus Pro Art PA401 PC case.
Asus ProArt Case PA401 review
 
 
Latest in Features
A car takes off down a muddy road, spraying dirt, in Assetto Corsa Rally.
Assetto Corsa Rally is a hardcore sim that proves Dirt Rally 2 was going easy on you
 
 
An illustration of a squad of Space Marine terminators firing storm bolters.
Confused about what's what in Warhammer? Let me introduce you to the Warhammer 40,000, Age of Sigmar, and Warhammer Fantasy settings in one easy beginner's guide
 
 
Giant baby monster peering over a rocky ledge in Little Nightmares 3
I wouldn't say Little Nightmares 3 is a bad game, but it certainly doesn't feel like a finished one
 
 
Collage showing upcoming movies
2027 is shaping up to be the biggest year for videogame movies yet, with the live-action Zelda movie, A Minecraft Movie sequel, Death Stranding, and more heavy-hitters planned
 
 
Close up of Shodan, antagonist of System Shock 2. Feminine face with circuitry spreading over it and out into wires surrounding.
26 years later, System Shock 2's music is a crucial part of its level design, and turning it off is a tragedy
 
 
A man crying at a grave in Red Dead Online.
'A glimmer of hope': What does GTA 6 mean for Red Dead Online?
 
 
  1. MSI Vector 16 HX AI and Razer Blade 16 gaming laptops on a blue background with a PC Gamer logo in the foreground
    1
    Best gaming laptop 2025: I've tested the best laptops for gaming of this generation and here are the ones I recommend
  2. 2
    Best SSD for gaming in 2025: the fastest and the best value solid state drives to perk up your PC
  3. 3
    Best Hall effect keyboards in 2025: the fastest, most customizable keyboards for competitive gaming
  4. 4
    Best PCIe 5.0 SSD for gaming in 2025: the only Gen 5 drives I will allow in my PC
  5. 5
    Best graphics cards in 2025: I've tested pretty much every AMD and Nvidia GPU of the past 20 years and these are today's top cards
  1. Acer Predator Triton 14 AI gaming laptop
    1
    Acer Predator Triton 14 AI review
  2. 2
    Insta360 Link 2C review
  3. 3
    Asus ROG Xbox Ally X review
  4. 4
    Keeper review
  5. 5
    Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines 2 review

PC Gamer is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...