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Build of the week: Behemoth Battlecruiser

Features
By James Davenport published 1 February 2016

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

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 1 of 32
Page 1 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 2 of 32
Page 2 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 3 of 32
Page 3 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 4 of 32
Page 4 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 5 of 32
Page 5 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 6 of 32
Page 6 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 7 of 32
Page 7 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 8 of 32
Page 8 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 9 of 32
Page 9 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 10 of 32
Page 10 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 11 of 32
Page 11 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 12 of 32
Page 12 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 13 of 32
Page 13 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 14 of 32
Page 14 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 15 of 32
Page 15 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 16 of 32
Page 16 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 17 of 32
Page 17 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 18 of 32
Page 18 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 19 of 32
Page 19 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 20 of 32
Page 20 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 21 of 32
Page 21 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 22 of 32
Page 22 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 23 of 32
Page 23 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 24 of 32
Page 24 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 25 of 32
Page 25 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 26 of 32
Page 26 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 27 of 32
Page 27 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 28 of 32
Page 28 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 29 of 32
Page 29 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 30 of 32
Page 30 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 31 of 32
Page 31 of 32

The 'battlestation' moniker has never been so aptly applied to a custom case mod until now. German artist Stefan Ulrich put together a massive Battlecruiser from the Starcraft series and did what any sensible person would: he put a PC in the damn thing. Most impressive? He spent approximately 300 hours building the whole ship by hand, and without the aid of a laser cutter or CNC saw.

The blocky multitudes that detail the cruiser’s hull were all etched in by Ulrich’s gentle, but precise mitts—no doubt made so by years of clicking, dragging, and hell of quick base-building skills. But the mod’s utility extends beyond simply looking cool. Ulrich knew the build would be immediately recognizable and figured he’d be showing it off regularly, so his plans divided the build into seven detachable components for easy transport and storage unit management.

Jim Raynor probably doesn’t have much time to play games while he’s squashing primal Zerg and crushing on his sweetie, The Queen of Blades, but were he a true terrestrial Terran, it’s easy to imagine him building something similar, looking towards the sky with wonder (and military bloodlust).

Pore over the build log for more photos and details, or check out Ulrich’s other projects in his creative community, RandomDesign.

Congrats on bringing this behemoth online, Stefan!

Behemoth Battlecruiser components:

CPU: Intel i7 5820K
GPU: MSI GTX 780Ti Lightning
Mobo: MSI X99A Godlike Gaming
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws F4-2666C15Q 32GB (8 x 4GB)
SSD: G.Skill Phoenix 120GB
PSU: Silverstone Strider Gold S Series ST85F-GS
Fans: Silverstone AP121-L (x6)
Watercooling: Bitspower components

YouTube YouTube
Watch On
Page 32 of 32
Page 32 of 32
PRODUCTS
StarCraft StarCraft 2
James Davenport
James Davenport
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James is stuck in an endless loop, playing the Dark Souls games on repeat until Elden Ring and Silksong set him free. He's a truffle pig for indie horror and weird FPS games too, seeking out games that actively hurt to play. Otherwise he's wandering Austin, identifying mushrooms and doodling grackles. 

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A screenshot of a Bro Cooling YouTube video, showing some of the details of its custom Threadripper, RTX Pro 6000 build
All hail the Bro MegaOrb: A custom-built, water-cooled Threadripper, RTX Pro 6000 monster that costs $60,000 or roughly the same as 16 GB of DDR5-5200 at today's prices
 
 
Tech creator 小宁子 XNZ with her 3-in-1 console creation, the 'Ningtendo PXBOX 5'
Tech creator makes console gaming Megazord, squeezing a PS5, Xbox Series S, and Nintendo Switch 2 inside a homemade cooling array
 
 
Titanium-cooled gaming PC from Jakkuh on YouTube
'Probably the worst build of my entire life': This YouTuber spent two months building a gaming PC with titanium liquid cooling, galvanic corrosion be damned
 
 
A promotional image for the Asus ROG G1000 gaming PC
Asus goes all out with its new ROG G1000 gaming PC: The 'world's first' to have a holographic fan system built into the case
 
 
A screenshot of World of Warcraft featuring an Imperial Destroyer ship from Star Wars. The massive, triangular ship was built by a player using housing tools.
I can tell World of Warcraft's player housing is going well by the amount of Star Wars stuff this one player keeps building
 
 
A gaming PC on a blue Cyber Monday background.
At $3,700, you'd really struggle to build a gaming PC as good as this RTX 5090 rig, even with the best Cyber Monday deals
 
 
Latest in Strategy
Titanium Court jazz
Steam Next Fest hasn't even started, and its first must-play demo is already here
 
 
Masters of Albion trailer still.
'We’re going to make some horrendous mistakes,' Peter Molyneux says about his upcoming swan song Masters of Albion: 'Horrendous, horrendous mistakes'
 
 
Concept art of a Tiger Warrior from Warhammer wearing golden jewelry.
Total War: Warhammer 3's first character pack stars an all-new legendary lord that puts the 'cat' in Grand Cathay
 
 
Dawn of War 4 Gamescom screenshots
'It's my favorite feature': Dawn of War 4 is adding a way to multi-attack enemies using a dragbox
 
 
Dawn of War 4 Gamescom screenshots
The Dawn of War 4 team isn't worried about Total War: Warhammer 40k: 'This is definitely a case of holy s***, it's two cakes'
 
 
Mewgenics art
'We have made back our development budget after 3 hours': Mewgenics explodes to number one Steam seller 14 years after its announcement
 
 
Latest in Features
MetaElite
An Elite Dangerous player discovered a way to write new stories into the margins of the 12-year-old space sandbox, and now thousands are testing it
 
 
Image for Judging by the GPT-4o situation, game developers will have a big problem if they get serious about AI chatbot NPCs
Judging by the GPT-4o situation, game developers will have a big problem if they get serious about AI chatbot NPCs
 
 
Dandelion takes a bow while Geralt facepalms behind him
The next Witcher spin-off game is about Dandelion sharing his version of Geralt's adventures with the world: 'you might encounter a stuffed unicorn'
 
 
Battlefield 6 roadmap FOV 90
The many-boxed roadmap represents everything I hate about shooters right now
 
 
A vampire holding a glass of wine or blood, probably blood, knowing vampires
If you've ever had a crippling Vampire Survivors or Slay the Spire habit, avoid Vampire Crawlers at all costs
 
 
A raider cooking a tick in Arc Raiders.
Arc Raiders full interview: 'Nobody whatsoever thought we'd have this many players'
 
 
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