Skip to main content
PC Gamer PC Gamer THE GLOBAL AUTHORITY ON PC GAMES
UK EditionUK US EditionUS CA EditionCanada AU EditionAustralia
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
  • Essential Hardware
  • Top 100
  • PC Gaming Show
  • Arc Raiders
  • BF6
  • 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
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
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
A collage of various PC components against a vibrant pink background, with a PC Gamer Recommended logo in the top right corner.
Hardware For the same price as a mid-range graphics card, you can upgrade your gaming PC's CPU, motherboard, cooler, and RAM to the latest AMD Ryzen setup
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
A terrible gaming PC built into a plastic jug
Gaming PCs This €130 gaming PC in a plastic jug churns out a whole 15 fps in Fortnite and might be the best/worst DIY build I've ever seen
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 Corsair Air 5400 PC case
PC Cases The many-chambered PC cases at Gamescom really showed up my old banger of a chassis
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
A custom DIY walnut wooden ITX PC case by MXC Builds
PC Cases 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
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
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
A promotional image of a Corsair AI Workstation 300 mini-PC against a green gradient background.
Gaming PCs Corsair's Strix Halo mini PC will set you back $2,300 for the top model, but boring old AI productivity is the name of the game
  1. Games
  2. Strategy

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
Social Links Navigation

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. 

Read more
A terrible gaming PC built into a plastic jug
This €130 gaming PC in a plastic jug churns out a whole 15 fps in Fortnite and might be the best/worst DIY build I've ever seen
 
 
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 Corsair Air 5400 PC case
The many-chambered PC cases at Gamescom really showed up my old banger of a chassis
 
 
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
 
 
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
 
 
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
 
 
Latest in Strategy
Plants vs Zombies lawn level
Fine, guess I'll play another 200 hours of Plants Vs Zombies since the remaster is perfect for Steam Deck
 
 
Victoria 3
Congratulations to Victoria 3 players on causing 860,000,000,000,000,000 deaths by famine in a single year, enough to depopulate Earth 107,000,000 times
 
 
A dog being interrogated
Jackbox Party Pack 11 is the first to not include sequels to earlier Jackbox games, but there's still plenty of familiar DNA in the all-new offerings
 
 
A screenshot of Surviving Mars: Relaunched, showing settlements covered by glass domes scattered across Mars' arid landscape.
Surviving Mars: Relaunched arrives in orbit next month, bringing a whole new political system and every DLC from the get-go
 
 
Dechala bares her fangs at a captured elf
Total War: Warhammer 3's Tides of Torment DLC will be out on the same day as 'a special showcase event where the future of the franchise will be revealed'
 
 
fft ivalice chronicles key art with delita and ramza standing back to back
Every Final Fantasy Tactics job, rated
 
 
Latest in Features
Voyager's bridge
Star Trek: Voyager – Across the Unknown is a dull, budget survival game, and I swear the show is so much better than this
 
 
Microsoft Xbox Series X
Everything is an Xbox now, so I see no reason to buy Xbox again
 
 
A car parked on the highway in front of an anime billboard.
Screamer is one of the coolest arcade racers I've played in a hot sec, and I felt like a total badass drifting through its neon-lit cityscapes
 
 
Full Metal Schoolgirl
My Steam account is now forever tainted with an achievement I got for accidentally upskirting a katana-wielding machine girl
 
 
Ninja Gaiden's Ryu next to DMC5's Dante
It feels sacrilegious to say it, but Ninja Gaiden 4 is at its best when it goes full Devil May Cry
 
 
A cartoonish 3D duck stands holding a gun in front of duck-shaped dummies from videogame Escape From Duckov.
Escape From Duckov might look like a parody, but it's a full-fledged, full-featured singleplayer bottling of extraction shooter juice
 
 
  1. Two of the best PC cases with the PC Gamer Recommended badge in the top right.
    1
    The best fish tank PC case in 2025: I've tested heaps of stylish chassis but only a few have earned my recommendation
  2. 2
    Best gaming laptop 2025: I've tested the best laptops for gaming of this generation and here are the ones I recommend
  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. The Razer Raiju V3 Pro wireless controller seen from various angles.
    1
    Razer Raiju V3 Pro review
  2. 2
    The Outer Worlds 2 review
  3. 3
    Farthest Frontier review
  4. 4
    Secretlab Magnus Evo review
  5. 5
    Scuf Valor Pro review

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

Add as a preferred source on Google
  • 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...