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With the Elite 431 Plus mid tower case Cooler Master wanted to change what a budget case was. Sporting USB 3.0, SATA X-Docking station and side window it certainly delivers on the feature front. An all black interior and a front blue LED fan gives it a sleek and stylish look that should please just about anyone. Toss in some tool free drive bays and you have yourself a budget case that certainly doesn’t feel ‘budget’.
Cases
Technic3D hat das Rasurbo Vort-X U3 PC-Gehäuse im Test. Das Vort-X Gehäuse aus der Gaming-Case Serie ist ein besonders preisbewusstes Gehäuse und soll in der Praxis den Anwender von seinen Leistungen überzeugen. Ob dies gelingt steht im nachfolgenden Review.
Cases
If there is one thing many people know Thermaltake for it is their cases, especially the ones that have that futuristic look to them. Today we will be checking out a case that has this look, the Overseer RX-I. This style appeals to many people, especially gamers. Thermaltake even calls this design an “E-sports gaming style front bezel.” Besides the cool looks this case features a top-mounted hard drive dock, USB 3.0 and eSATA connectivity, support for 3.5-inch and 2.5-inch hard drives, 3 included fans and since it is a full tower case you can fit motherboards inside up to E-ATX! Read on as we check out this futuristic case!
Cases
Sharkoon have been in existence for nearly 10 years and have recently expanded their market significantly. Their product range is rather extensive but they do focus quite heavily on the production and design of PC cases. They currently have around 25 cases on the market and while this product – the Sharkoon T9 Value Edition (in Green) may be a value oriented chassis design we don’t expect it to be compromising in terms of features.
Cases
Sharkoon offer a range of PC cases and today we have one of their most recent models on our test bench. The midi sized T9 Value Edition aims to offer a mix of style and functionality for gamers on a budget and today we find out if that is possible for around £50.
Cases
With new cases continually being released by all of the major manufactures, we are getting more features, better build quality, higher airflow, and better looks while prices decrease. Today we will review Raidmax's newest mid-tower entry, the Viper. It has all of the biggest features to go toe-to-toe with the best cases on the market, but will its features be enough to hold its own against its vast amount of competitors?
Cases
The Three Hundred Two is an updated version of the Antec Three Hundred, with several new features added, such as eight expansion slots, holes for external liquid cooling solutions, USB 3.0 ports, and an optional fan to cool the underside of the CPU. Let's see if its new incarnation is a good buy as well.
Cases
Computergehäuse sind in erster Linie eines: Eine Geschmacksfrage! Viele Modelle sind einfach nur billig oder gnadenlos langweilig, andere martialisch aufgemacht und auf Krawall getrimmt. Es gibt aber auch Modelle, die sich nur schwer einordnen lassen, beispielsweise das extravagante Schneckengehäuse Lian Li PC-U6.
Die Produkte des Herstellers Lian Li gehören zu den erfreulichen Ausnahmen im Gehäusemarkt, denn dort stehen eine hohe Fertigungsqualität und eine elegante Schlichtheit im Vordergrund. Zuweilen werden Lian Lis Schöpfungen wegen ihrer strengen Kastigkeit getadelt, doch bei unserem heutigen Testkandidaten besteht diese Gefahr nicht. Das PC-U6 wurde von seinen Schöpfern nämlich im wahrsten Sinne des Wortes zu Schnecke gemacht, doch wie vertragen sich seine Rundungen mit den eckigen PC-Komponenten?
Cases
I remember looking at the original Midgard from Xigmatek and I even refreshed my memory by looking at the old review from 2010. As I remember, the original offered something like five ODD bays, five HDD bays with metal trays, seven expansion slots and a pair of orange bladed fans to go along with the tool-less mechanisms used in that chassis. One other thing I remember was that the original did have most of the front and the entire top covered with mesh for easy breathe-ability for both air in through the front. Via convection it allowed hot air to escape right through the top passively or you could add fans to help things along. All in all, for the time of its release, the Midgard had an oddly placed front I/O panel, but other than that it was a nice chassis for its day.
As time progresses, older designs are left in the dust in favor of cases with USB 3.0, room to manage wires behind the motherboard tray and even handy hot-swap SATA hard drive docks built into cases are a huge hit. Well, Xigmatek saw the writing on the wall and took what was a good selling product for them and figured it was time to update the chassis to today's customers' expectations. With a fresh set of eyes, the new release got both an exterior and an interior redo. There are some subtle hints to the original case, but honestly it looks a lot like the mid towers we seen from BitFenix. Either way, the new chassis is a definite improvement over the original concept.
Cases
Today I’ll be reviewing the BitFenix Raider ATX case. BitFenix has only been around a couple of years now, but has been churning out many great cases (such as the Colossus or Shinobi) at a frequent rate. This case is a mid-tower, in comparison so some of its bigger brothers, however I have high hopes that it will still meet the expectations of the BitFenix name.
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