The Computex 2023 present ground is not only a place for PC {hardware} corporations to showcase their new tech — it is also residence to dozens of wildly artistic case mods created by unbiased artists from world wide. We did not have as a lot time as normal to stroll the exhibition halls searching for mods, however managing editor Matt Safford managed to snap some pictures of some fairly superior ones as he was speeding between conferences.
Cyberpunk Motorbike Case
We noticed this 3D-printed cyberpunk motorcycle-inspired case mod by LINModified at Enermax’s sales space, showcasing Enermax’s Aquafusion ADV AiO cooler. It is known as “The Future on Wheels,” however coincidentally has no wheels. Maybe the Enermax MarbleBron RGB 850W PSU is meant to be a wheel? (Or perhaps the longer term has no wheels, I do not know.)
Alien Facehugger Case
This Alien facehugger case at G.Ability’s sales space options 32GB of G.Ability Trident Z5 RGB DDR5-6000 RAM in addition to an Intel Core i7-13700K processor, an Asus TUF Gaming GeForce RTX 3070 GPU, and a 500GB Samsung 870 EVO SSD.
To be honest, if this case have been involuntarily connected to your face, no less than you’d get a large RGB mild present and the power to play most video games at 1080p. Maybe a little bit child cell processor would come out of your abdomen ultimately, although.
Cybertower Case
We beloved this multi-level futuristic cybertower by Samuel Callanta of Samca Studios. This extremely detailed case mod makes use of Thermaltake’s Tower 500 as its base and received second place (first runner up) in Thermaltake’s 2022 CaseMOD Invitational Season 1.
The mod options an Intel Core i9-12900K, an ASRock Z690 Metal Legend WiFi 6E motherboard with 32GB DDR4-3600 RAM, and an Asus ROG STrix Radeon RX 6750 XT OC Version GPU.
The Moon Case
Titled “The Moon,” this “air area middle” tower by Krittanon Kidprasert took first place in Thermaltake’s 2022 CaseMOD Invitational Season 1. Additionally based mostly on Thermaltake’s Tower 500 case, this mod rotates to showcase completely different parts. (Kidprasert additionally created the Cooler Grasp Shark X mod we noticed — and I beloved — at CES 2023.)
Medieval Church Case
Appropriately titled “Quiet Please,” this case mod by CUGMAG is predicated on be quiet!’s Pure Base 500 FX case and has been modded to appear to be a medieval church — full with stained glass and catacombs. The construct consists of an Intel i9-10900KF processor, an MSI MEG Z490 Unify motherboard, and a Zotac RTX 3060Ti Twin Edge OC GPU.
Tower of Mild Case
It is probably not terribly sensible, however this black and gold tower of sunshine is definitely mesmerizing with its rhombille tiling-etched acrylic. This mod, created by Mike Petereyns of MP Custom-made, was additionally on show at G.Ability’s sales space, that includes 64GB of G.Ability Trident Z5 RGB DDR5-6000 RAM, in addition to an AMD Ryzen 9 7900X processor, a ProArt X670E-CREATOR WiFi motherboard, and an Asus Radeon RX 7900 XT GPU.
Cybernetic Cylinder
This cracked cybernetic cylinder is designed to showcase the GPU inside — that is Zotac’s new Geforce RTX 4070 Amp Airo Spider-Man: Throughout the Spider-Verse card, by the way in which. This spectacular, custom-built case mod was created by Mark’s Fabrication.
Pyramid Case with Liquid Nitrogen Overclock
We’re unsure if this colourful, misty pyramid can be a case mod a lot as it is a strategy to preserve a gentle movement of liquid nitrogen pumping to chill off G.Ability’s newest Trident Z5 RGB DDR5-8000 reminiscence module, which managed to hit a non-record-breaking 10,000 MT/s.
This “mod” by ElmorLabs additionally options an Intel Core i9-13900K processor, an Asus ROG Maximus Z790 Apex motherboard, and a PowerColor Hellhound AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX GPU.
Extra Thermaltake Mods
These is probably not as wild-looking because the custom-built instances, however we respect these ultra-clean builds on show at Thermaltake’s sales space. The primary is by Mhike Samsin from TantricmodZ PC Casemodding, and makes use of Thermaltake’s Ceres 500 Snow as its base and contains a {custom} water cooling setup with inflexible black acrylic tubing and a temperature monitoring display screen.
The second is by Michael John Larcerna of MadMods PC Modding, and makes use of Thermaltake’s Core P6 TG Racing Inexperienced as a base. And the third is by Jesse Palacio of JP Modified and makes use of Thermaltake’s Tower 500 as a base.