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
  • Borderlands 4
  • Essential Hardware
  • Silksong
  • Battlefield 6
  • Quizzes
  • AI
Don't miss these
A gaming PC in the process of being built, using Radeon and Ryzen components and an Asus Pro Art PA401 PC case.
Gaming PCs 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.
Gaming PCs I've taken a proper bargain of a case from Thermaltake and built a gorgeous white PC with it
RazQ_'s gaming PC sleeper build, packaged inside the frame of an Xbox 360 Slim
Gaming PCs This is not an Xbox 360, it's a gaming PC in disguise
A Stormcraft Sirius gaming PC on a blue background
Gaming PCs RTX 5060 Ti gaming PCs are finally starting to approach actual budget prices and for $200 off this is the one I'd pick from the bunch
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
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 iBuyPower Y40 Pro gaming PC on a blue background
Gaming PCs It's not every day I can recommend such a decent high-end gaming PC for well under $2,000 like this RTX 5070 Ti iBuyPower Y40 Pro
Retro-style PC housing built using white Lego-style bricks.
PC Cases Rather than buy a brand new PC case, one Redditor elects to make their own out of Lego-style bricks
The Monochrome 2 mini PC by TheJiral
Hardware This striking two-toned mini PC features a fully customised fanless cooling system for Framework and AMD's new Halo Strix motherboards
ABS Cyclone gaming PC on a blue background
Gaming PCs Sick of Nvidia? You can now get a beefy all Team Red PC with a Ryzen 7 9700X, RX 9060 XT, and 32 GB of RAM for just over $1,200
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
A screenshot of Majsterkowanie i nie tylko's completed homemade DIY CPU
Hardware A DIY mad scientist from Poland built his own CPU out of dozens of ancient memory chips
iBuyPower Y40 Pro gaming PC with keyboard and mouse on a blue background
Gaming PCs Now Prime Day is over, AMD gaming PCs have returned to the top of the value pile, case in point this RX 9070 XT and 9800X3D build
Zotac MEK gaming PC
Gaming PCs This Zotac RTX 5080 rig is still $1,000 off and better and cheaper than every other gaming PC deal I've seen over Prime Day
A Corsair Air 5400 PC case
PC Cases The many-chambered PC cases at Gamescom really showed up my old banger of a chassis
  1. Hardware
  2. PC Cases

Build of the week: NES 3.0

Features
By Amber Bouman published 6 July 2015

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

Every Monday, Build of the week highlights a unique rig from the web's most dedicated PC building communities.

This week’s Build of the Week is also our first reader submission! Linustechtips.com user ungreedy sent us a heads up on his custom case mod that uses a 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System to house an Intel Core i5-4670K CPU, an ASRock Mini ITX motherboard, and an MSI GeForce GTX 750 video card. This NES 3.0 build is actually ungreedy’s first custom case mod; he says that he’s wanted to build a custom NES PC since the first time he saw such a build done, and when his uncle gifted him a broken NES, he just couldn’t stop thinking about what to do for his own build.

In the end, that meant taking apart the NES to clean it down (relatively simple), sand it and paint it (somewhat more complicated – particularly dremeling out the bottom and sanding). Ungreedy’s goal was to keep the build as clean as possible on the outside with the bare minimum number of holes. He wanted to custom paint the case to give it a modern twist on the classic NES appearance; in the end the build took just over seven months’ worth of work.

Ungreedy tells us that the hardest part of the build was getting the cooling systems right, with many hours spent testing fans and CPU coolers. Builders who’d like to attempt something similar would do well to follow his advice on extremely patience: a build like this will take both an even temper and creative thinking to overcome the obstacles that are likely to pop up along the way (like trying to squeeze two fans into the body of an NES). Thanks for the submission ungreedy, and congrats on the build!

NES 3.0 case mod parts list

CPU: Intel Core i5-4670K 3.4Ghz Quad-Core Processor
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i 57.5 CFM CPU Cooler
Motherboard: ASRock H97M-ITX/AC Mini ITX LGA1150 Motherboard
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB Video Card
Storage: Hitachi Travelstar 1TB 2.5 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
Case Fan: GELID Silent 7 (low speed optimized silent fan)
Case: 1985 Nintendo

Other: HDPlex

Page 1 of 8
Page 1 of 8

Every Monday, Build of the week highlights a unique rig from the web's most dedicated PC building communities.

This week’s Build of the Week is also our first reader submission! Linustechtips.com user ungreedy sent us a heads up on his custom case mod that uses a 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System to house an Intel Core i5-4670K CPU, an ASRock Mini ITX motherboard, and an MSI GeForce GTX 750 video card. This NES 3.0 build is actually ungreedy’s first custom case mod; he says that he’s wanted to build a custom NES PC since the first time he saw such a build done, and when his uncle gifted him a broken NES, he just couldn’t stop thinking about what to do for his own build.

In the end, that meant taking apart the NES to clean it down (relatively simple), sand it and paint it (somewhat more complicated – particularly dremeling out the bottom and sanding). Ungreedy’s goal was to keep the build as clean as possible on the outside with the bare minimum number of holes. He wanted to custom paint the case to give it a modern twist on the classic NES appearance; in the end the build took just over seven months’ worth of work.

Ungreedy tells us that the hardest part of the build was getting the cooling systems right, with many hours spent testing fans and CPU coolers. Builders who’d like to attempt something similar would do well to follow his advice on extremely patience: a build like this will take both an even temper and creative thinking to overcome the obstacles that are likely to pop up along the way (like trying to squeeze two fans into the body of an NES). Thanks for the submission ungreedy, and congrats on the build!

NES 3.0 case mod parts list

CPU: Intel Core i5-4670K 3.4Ghz Quad-Core Processor
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i 57.5 CFM CPU Cooler
Motherboard: ASRock H97M-ITX/AC Mini ITX LGA1150 Motherboard
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB Video Card
Storage: Hitachi Travelstar 1TB 2.5 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
Case Fan: GELID Silent 7 (low speed optimized silent fan)
Case: 1985 Nintendo
Other: HDPlex

Page 2 of 8
Page 2 of 8

Every Monday, Build of the week highlights a unique rig from the web's most dedicated PC building communities.

This week’s Build of the Week is also our first reader submission! Linustechtips.com user ungreedy sent us a heads up on his custom case mod that uses a 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System to house an Intel Core i5-4670K CPU, an ASRock Mini ITX motherboard, and an MSI GeForce GTX 750 video card. This NES 3.0 build is actually ungreedy’s first custom case mod; he says that he’s wanted to build a custom NES PC since the first time he saw such a build done, and when his uncle gifted him a broken NES, he just couldn’t stop thinking about what to do for his own build.

In the end, that meant taking apart the NES to clean it down (relatively simple), sand it and paint it (somewhat more complicated – particularly dremeling out the bottom and sanding). Ungreedy’s goal was to keep the build as clean as possible on the outside with the bare minimum number of holes. He wanted to custom paint the case to give it a modern twist on the classic NES appearance; in the end the build took just over seven months’ worth of work.

Ungreedy tells us that the hardest part of the build was getting the cooling systems right, with many hours spent testing fans and CPU coolers. Builders who’d like to attempt something similar would do well to follow his advice on extremely patience: a build like this will take both an even temper and creative thinking to overcome the obstacles that are likely to pop up along the way (like trying to squeeze two fans into the body of an NES). Thanks for the submission ungreedy, and congrats on the build!

NES 3.0 case mod parts list

CPU: Intel Core i5-4670K 3.4Ghz Quad-Core Processor
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i 57.5 CFM CPU Cooler
Motherboard: ASRock H97M-ITX/AC Mini ITX LGA1150 Motherboard
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB Video Card
Storage: Hitachi Travelstar 1TB 2.5 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
Case Fan: GELID Silent 7 (low speed optimized silent fan)
Case: 1985 Nintendo
Other: HDPlex

Page 3 of 8
Page 3 of 8

Every Monday, Build of the week highlights a unique rig from the web's most dedicated PC building communities.

This week’s Build of the Week is also our first reader submission! Linustechtips.com user ungreedy sent us a heads up on his custom case mod that uses a 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System to house an Intel Core i5-4670K CPU, an ASRock Mini ITX motherboard, and an MSI GeForce GTX 750 video card. This NES 3.0 build is actually ungreedy’s first custom case mod; he says that he’s wanted to build a custom NES PC since the first time he saw such a build done, and when his uncle gifted him a broken NES, he just couldn’t stop thinking about what to do for his own build.

In the end, that meant taking apart the NES to clean it down (relatively simple), sand it and paint it (somewhat more complicated – particularly dremeling out the bottom and sanding). Ungreedy’s goal was to keep the build as clean as possible on the outside with the bare minimum number of holes. He wanted to custom paint the case to give it a modern twist on the classic NES appearance; in the end the build took just over seven months’ worth of work.

Ungreedy tells us that the hardest part of the build was getting the cooling systems right, with many hours spent testing fans and CPU coolers. Builders who’d like to attempt something similar would do well to follow his advice on extremely patience: a build like this will take both an even temper and creative thinking to overcome the obstacles that are likely to pop up along the way (like trying to squeeze two fans into the body of an NES). Thanks for the submission ungreedy, and congrats on the build!

NES 3.0 case mod parts list

CPU: Intel Core i5-4670K 3.4Ghz Quad-Core Processor
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i 57.5 CFM CPU Cooler
Motherboard: ASRock H97M-ITX/AC Mini ITX LGA1150 Motherboard
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB Video Card
Storage: Hitachi Travelstar 1TB 2.5 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
Case Fan: GELID Silent 7 (low speed optimized silent fan)
Case: 1985 Nintendo

Other: HDPlex

Page 4 of 8
Page 4 of 8

Every Monday, Build of the week highlights a unique rig from the web's most dedicated PC building communities.

This week’s Build of the Week is also our first reader submission! Linustechtips.com user ungreedy sent us a heads up on his custom case mod that uses a 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System to house an Intel Core i5-4670K CPU, an ASRock Mini ITX motherboard, and an MSI GeForce GTX 750 video card. This NES 3.0 build is actually ungreedy’s first custom case mod; he says that he’s wanted to build a custom NES PC since the first time he saw such a build done, and when his uncle gifted him a broken NES, he just couldn’t stop thinking about what to do for his own build.

In the end, that meant taking apart the NES to clean it down (relatively simple), sand it and paint it (somewhat more complicated – particularly dremeling out the bottom and sanding). Ungreedy’s goal was to keep the build as clean as possible on the outside with the bare minimum number of holes. He wanted to custom paint the case to give it a modern twist on the classic NES appearance; in the end the build took just over seven months’ worth of work.

Ungreedy tells us that the hardest part of the build was getting the cooling systems right, with many hours spent testing fans and CPU coolers. Builders who’d like to attempt something similar would do well to follow his advice on extremely patience: a build like this will take both an even temper and creative thinking to overcome the obstacles that are likely to pop up along the way (like trying to squeeze two fans into the body of an NES). Thanks for the submission ungreedy, and congrats on the build!

NES 3.0 case mod parts list

CPU: Intel Core i5-4670K 3.4Ghz Quad-Core Processor
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i 57.5 CFM CPU Cooler
Motherboard: ASRock H97M-ITX/AC Mini ITX LGA1150 Motherboard
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB Video Card
Storage: Hitachi Travelstar 1TB 2.5 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
Case Fan: GELID Silent 7 (low speed optimized silent fan)
Case: 1985 Nintendo

Other: HDPlex

Page 5 of 8
Page 5 of 8

Every Monday, Build of the week highlights a unique rig from the web's most dedicated PC building communities.

This week’s Build of the Week is also our first reader submission! Linustechtips.com user ungreedy sent us a heads up on his custom case mod that uses a 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System to house an Intel Core i5-4670K CPU, an ASRock Mini ITX motherboard, and an MSI GeForce GTX 750 video card. This NES 3.0 build is actually ungreedy’s first custom case mod; he says that he’s wanted to build a custom NES PC since the first time he saw such a build done, and when his uncle gifted him a broken NES, he just couldn’t stop thinking about what to do for his own build.

In the end, that meant taking apart the NES to clean it down (relatively simple), sand it and paint it (somewhat more complicated – particularly dremeling out the bottom and sanding). Ungreedy’s goal was to keep the build as clean as possible on the outside with the bare minimum number of holes. He wanted to custom paint the case to give it a modern twist on the classic NES appearance; in the end the build took just over seven months’ worth of work.

Ungreedy tells us that the hardest part of the build was getting the cooling systems right, with many hours spent testing fans and CPU coolers. Builders who’d like to attempt something similar would do well to follow his advice on extremely patience: a build like this will take both an even temper and creative thinking to overcome the obstacles that are likely to pop up along the way (like trying to squeeze two fans into the body of an NES). Thanks for the submission ungreedy, and congrats on the build!

NES 3.0 case mod parts list

CPU: Intel Core i5-4670K 3.4Ghz Quad-Core Processor
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i 57.5 CFM CPU Cooler
Motherboard: ASRock H97M-ITX/AC Mini ITX LGA1150 Motherboard
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB Video Card
Storage: Hitachi Travelstar 1TB 2.5 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
Case Fan: GELID Silent 7 (low speed optimized silent fan)
Case: 1985 Nintendo

Other: HDPlex

Page 6 of 8
Page 6 of 8

Every Monday, Build of the week highlights a unique rig from the web's most dedicated PC building communities.

This week’s Build of the Week is also our first reader submission! Linustechtips.com user ungreedy sent us a heads up on his custom case mod that uses a 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System to house an Intel Core i5-4670K CPU, an ASRock Mini ITX motherboard, and an MSI GeForce GTX 750 video card. This NES 3.0 build is actually ungreedy’s first custom case mod; he says that he’s wanted to build a custom NES PC since the first time he saw such a build done, and when his uncle gifted him a broken NES, he just couldn’t stop thinking about what to do for his own build.

In the end, that meant taking apart the NES to clean it down (relatively simple), sand it and paint it (somewhat more complicated – particularly dremeling out the bottom and sanding). Ungreedy’s goal was to keep the build as clean as possible on the outside with the bare minimum number of holes. He wanted to custom paint the case to give it a modern twist on the classic NES appearance; in the end the build took just over seven months’ worth of work.

Ungreedy tells us that the hardest part of the build was getting the cooling systems right, with many hours spent testing fans and CPU coolers. Builders who’d like to attempt something similar would do well to follow his advice on extremely patience: a build like this will take both an even temper and creative thinking to overcome the obstacles that are likely to pop up along the way (like trying to squeeze two fans into the body of an NES). Thanks for the submission ungreedy, and congrats on the build!

NES 3.0 case mod parts list

CPU: Intel Core i5-4670K 3.4Ghz Quad-Core Processor
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i 57.5 CFM CPU Cooler
Motherboard: ASRock H97M-ITX/AC Mini ITX LGA1150 Motherboard
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB Video Card
Storage: Hitachi Travelstar 1TB 2.5 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
Case Fan: GELID Silent 7 (low speed optimized silent fan)
Case: 1985 Nintendo

Other: HDPlex

Page 7 of 8
Page 7 of 8

Every Monday, Build of the week highlights a unique rig from the web's most dedicated PC building communities.

This week’s Build of the Week is also our first reader submission! Linustechtips.com user ungreedy sent us a heads up on his custom case mod that uses a 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System to house an Intel Core i5-4670K CPU, an ASRock Mini ITX motherboard, and an MSI GeForce GTX 750 video card. This NES 3.0 build is actually ungreedy’s first custom case mod; he says that he’s wanted to build a custom NES PC since the first time he saw such a build done, and when his uncle gifted him a broken NES, he just couldn’t stop thinking about what to do for his own build.

In the end, that meant taking apart the NES to clean it down (relatively simple), sand it and paint it (somewhat more complicated – particularly dremeling out the bottom and sanding). Ungreedy’s goal was to keep the build as clean as possible on the outside with the bare minimum number of holes. He wanted to custom paint the case to give it a modern twist on the classic NES appearance; in the end the build took just over seven months’ worth of work.

Ungreedy tells us that the hardest part of the build was getting the cooling systems right, with many hours spent testing fans and CPU coolers. Builders who’d like to attempt something similar would do well to follow his advice on extremely patience: a build like this will take both an even temper and creative thinking to overcome the obstacles that are likely to pop up along the way (like trying to squeeze two fans into the body of an NES). Thanks for the submission ungreedy, and congrats on the build!

NES 3.0 case mod parts list

CPU: Intel Core i5-4670K 3.4Ghz Quad-Core Processor
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-L9i 57.5 CFM CPU Cooler
Motherboard: ASRock H97M-ITX/AC Mini ITX LGA1150 Motherboard
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB Video Card
Storage: Hitachi Travelstar 1TB 2.5 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
Case Fan: GELID Silent 7 (low speed optimized silent fan)
Case: 1985 Nintendo

Other: HDPlex

Page 8 of 8
Page 8 of 8
Amber Bouman
Read more
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
 
 
RazQ_'s gaming PC sleeper build, packaged inside the frame of an Xbox 360 Slim
This is not an Xbox 360, it's a gaming PC in disguise
 
 
A Stormcraft Sirius gaming PC on a blue background
RTX 5060 Ti gaming PCs are finally starting to approach actual budget prices and for $200 off this is the one I'd pick from the bunch
 
 
Minisforum AtomMan G7 PT mini PC and AtomMan Venus UM790 mini PCs
Best mini PCs in 2025: The compact computers I love the most
 
 
Three gaming PC cases underneath badges showing the Editor's Pick, Best Value, and Ridiculous Power categories
Best gaming PC builds: budget, mid-range and high-end recommendations
 
 
Latest in PC Cases
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
 
 
Retro-style PC housing built using white Lego-style bricks.
Rather than buy a brand new PC case, one Redditor elects to make their own out of Lego-style bricks
 
 
A Corsair Air 5400 PC case
The many-chambered PC cases at Gamescom really showed up my old banger of a chassis
 
 
Arctic's Xtender PC case on a white desk with various parts being installed to build a functional gaming PC.
Arctic Xtender PC case review
 
 
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
 
 
Hyte's booth at Computex 2025, where it showed off brand new colourful PC cases.
Hyte lowers prices for PC cases in the US after hiking them in response to Trump's tariffs, but innocent weebs are still paying the price
 
 
Latest in Features
Vex standing in front of a fiery blaze in Borderlands 4.
Borderlands 4 shed its iconic UI and all it got was this stupid live service-y inventory that doesn't let me filter my crap properly
 
 
Borderlands 4 respec: Vex running towards a large Ripper while firing a corrosive weapon. Vex's summon Trouble and Rafa are also running towards the enemy in the background.
Is Borderlands 4 the series at 'its most potent', or 'uninspired' and 'painfully dull'? The PC Gamer team is divided
 
 
Astronaut birds gaze lovingly at some kind of shining artefact.
I thought the new space factory management sim from the creators of Dorfromantik would be just as cosy, but now I'm panicking over my twisted interplanetary production lines
 
 
Nvidia RTX 5090 Founders Edition graphics card on different backgrounds
Are high-end GPUs even worth buying anymore? I'm starting to have my doubts
 
 
Selection of wireless gaming peripherals, including an Xbox controller, an Audeze Maxwell headset, Lemokey L1 HE keyboard, and Keychron M5 mouse
Of all that's wireless in this gaming life, gaming keyboards aren't just entirely pointless they're [expletive deleted] annoying
 
 
A screenshot from Misty Judgment showing a smiling woman
Five new Steam games you probably missed (September 15, 2025)
 
 
  1. Asus Zephyrus G14 and Razer Blade 16 gaming laptops
    1
    Best gaming laptop in 2025: I've tested a ton of notebooks this generation and these are the best in every category
  2. 2
    Best Hall effect keyboards in 2025: the fastest, most customizable keyboards for competitive gaming
  3. 3
    Best PCIe 5.0 SSD for gaming in 2025: the only Gen 5 drives I will allow in my PC
  4. 4
    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
  5. 5
    Best gaming chair in 2025: I've tested a ton of gaming chairs and these are the seats I'd suggest for any PC gamer
  1. Humanscale Freedom Chair with Headrest
    1
    Humanscale Freedom Chair with Headrest review
  2. 2
    Strange Antiquities review: Solve dozens of little mysteries in a creepy yet cozy curio shop
  3. 3
    Hollow Knight: Silksong review — Worth the pain
  4. 4
    Asus ProArt Case PA401 review
  5. 5
    Acer Predator Helios 18 AI gaming laptop 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...