If you're looking for a case in this price range I can vouch that you wouldn't be disappointed with this. If you put a 280mm at the top, route all your motherboard and fan cables first or it'll be too cramped to do so. If you want to use a 360mm then you'll have to replace the included front fans and put it there. This case is a little smaller than other mid tower cases. Not the quietest case but nowhere near the worst. The fans do daisy chain so it's not a huge deal. If you want more control over the RGB then plug them into your motherboard or a RGB controller. The top IO RGB bottom doesn't allow for static colors. For whatever reason the back doesn't have that. The front panel has little teeth at the bottom to latch and slide into place. It doesn't look like the most airflow centric cases out there but it definitely is.Ĭons: - The back panel can be annoying to fit back on once the cables are routed. Somehow it's easy to remove but also feels secure in place. I like how easy the front panel comes off. By removing the HDD drive cage, the bottom chamber has a ton of extra room for cable management. I didn't really have any issues trying to fit all the cables. Cable management space is deceptively large. I didn't even realize it was a 140 until I started building in it. Includes 3 ARGB fans and 1 regular 140mm fan. Maybe not the highest quality but definitely sturdy enough. I didn't even need to look at instruction book once. For $90 I can't imagine getting something better. Just finished building in this case and I have to say that I am very happy with it.
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