What size is right for YOU??

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  • čas přidán 20. 05. 2024
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @Matuse
    @Matuse Před 2 lety +3003

    Double tower. You take two full towers, cut out the bottom of one and the top of the other, weld them together, then run 2 CPUs in CPU-SLI with quad video cards. It's able to run Pong in 84,000 FPS.

    • @VIKINGzTH
      @VIKINGzTH Před 2 lety +152

      Threadripper times two 👀

    • @kangjohan78
      @kangjohan78 Před 2 lety +74

      Oddly specific. hehehe

    • @brando3342
      @brando3342 Před 2 lety +36

      @Matuse Super slow-mo Pong videos never looked so smooth!!

    • @MotoCat91
      @MotoCat91 Před 2 lety +41

      Many years ago I actually did a double tower build, but side by side rather than on top..
      Left side was a conventional style mid-tower with 3x GPUs, loaded up with HDDs and all the water cooling going into the back wall, through to the other side.
      Right side was another of the same case but effectively hollowed out and the window moved to the outside, and this one housed the PSU, radiators, pump/res
      Imagine a LianLi PC-08, but much uglier and not very practical

    • @Hybris51129
      @Hybris51129 Před 2 lety +10

      Thermaltake makes a case (W200 I believe) that should be able to do just that.

  • @Myst3ry714
    @Myst3ry714 Před 2 lety +186

    Case Reviews are also good because there are so few actual Brick and Mortar computer stores where we can get a good look at cases and their size, and all the little caveats in person.

    • @UnknownMoses
      @UnknownMoses Před 7 měsíci +4

      Is that not the true, I miss Frys, I which there was a Microcenter near me.

    • @Overlord277
      @Overlord277 Před 7 měsíci +2

      That's what we get for shopping online to save $20 on a build.

    • @itsmehighguy7639
      @itsmehighguy7639 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@UnknownMoses I assume you are in Phoenix

    • @thegrimwrangler
      @thegrimwrangler Před 4 měsíci +2

      Glad I've got two microcenters and a b&h nearby 😎

  • @fluphybunny930
    @fluphybunny930 Před 2 lety +702

    To me mid towers are still the sweet spot.
    Good amount of room where you aren't shoe horning components in while still been small enough to place on or below the desk.

    • @ryanokeefe12
      @ryanokeefe12 Před 2 lety +26

      Have a look at compact mATX if you're looking for a proper sweet spot of small size vs minimal constraints on components.

    • @curvingfyre6810
      @curvingfyre6810 Před 2 lety +22

      @@ryanokeefe12 Matx is the sweet spot for most people. But those of us who are strapped for budget have to buy the motherboard which is cheapest, size regardless, and select a cheap or used case for it, not the other way around.

    • @ryanokeefe12
      @ryanokeefe12 Před 2 lety +10

      @@curvingfyre6810 Hence why I said mATX is the sweet spot for smaller form factor.. mITX is far more expensive than mATX.

    • @Johnny76624
      @Johnny76624 Před 2 lety +1

      Small midtower's are nice.

    • @angrysocialjusticewarrior
      @angrysocialjusticewarrior Před 2 lety +20

      Or just buy a super size atx tower and use THAT as your desk?

  • @Atari_Safari
    @Atari_Safari Před rokem +9

    I love my Thermaltake View 71 and there's a sense of pride when everyone I know says it's the biggest computer they've ever seen. All the space to come up with a variety of cooling/fan setups along with lighting themes is awesome. I can't go back to mid towers for my main build. I could see myself doing a small form factor or mid tower for a secondary PC to play with though.

  • @MrMartinSchou
    @MrMartinSchou Před 2 lety +327

    15:00 - Now I sort of want to see Jay put four or more ITX boards into a single case that size. Bonus points for cooling all CPUs and GPUs with a single loop.

    • @ThePlacemat
      @ThePlacemat Před 2 lety +35

      a lan party in one case

    • @MrMartinSchou
      @MrMartinSchou Před 2 lety +27

      @@ThePlacemat Four gamers, one case.
      Or two gamers, one streaming computer, one server host.

    • @pocketlint82
      @pocketlint82 Před 2 lety +6

      If love to see where he puts all those power supplies. Sounds like a cool build

    • @linuxstreamer8910
      @linuxstreamer8910 Před 2 lety +9

      and only use sff parts

    • @spawntohell
      @spawntohell Před 2 lety +3

      I bet he will do it! He has enough stuff around to make a great content video and thinking of it might be usefull in day to day use like i sometimes use 2 computers at the same desk ..hmm typing this i think i just got gived myself a ideea for saving space...

  • @miless17
    @miless17 Před 2 lety +210

    I settled on an ITX build because I’m tight on space and while there are a number of things to keep in mind it’s really crazy how much you can fit into such a small enclosure. You don’t have to make many sacrifices as far as hardware goes.

    • @justinpatterson5291
      @justinpatterson5291 Před 2 lety +31

      I like ITX builds. But, you pay a premium for the form factor. Especially for optimized, boutique cases.

    • @danielkarram4390
      @danielkarram4390 Před 2 lety +23

      Can confirm.
      N200
      3090 FE
      12900k
      280mm aio
      And 4 other fans
      So much in such a small package.

    • @thomoose1388
      @thomoose1388 Před 2 lety +9

      It's easy to cool (air or water) a 3080 and 5900x in a Nr200p at this point and that's a very easy size to work with. Not too big, not too small.

    • @northwiebesick7136
      @northwiebesick7136 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm looking at building an ITX build, myself, specifically for a home server, used for media serving, and data backup, but in a different version than what most would think of. What's different, is that I want to put it into a 1999 iMac bubble Mac AIO machine, which is currently gutted, including getting rid of the CRT monitor from the inside, to make more room for the components, and more room for less heat as well, while attaching a portable monitor to the front... Also, it'll probably be an AMD APU build, so that'll help as well, with the heat, as there won't be an extra graphics card putting heat into the system... It will look crappy on the outside, I'm sure, since it's an old machine, that doesn't look shiny like in the pictures, but at least it's a good test machine, to see if the idea might work, after which I can get something like the see-through graphite version, instead of the current one which is a see through blue color, which I don't specifically like

    • @joko49perez
      @joko49perez Před 2 lety +3

      Wallet

  • @Pestigirioso
    @Pestigirioso Před 2 lety +2

    For my build I went for a Cooler Master Q300L. I fell in love with the looks (sadly it doesn´t come with glass panel, just a plastic one), and I feel it is just the right size for me, with a micro-ATX.
    Also, the airflow is insane. It has holes everywhere, so it kind of works out. I love that case, haha.

  • @datapro007
    @datapro007 Před rokem +18

    I was glad to see the Nano S in your lineup. I did a Ryzen 3700x build in one a couple of years ago with a full size graphics card, air cooled, which I'm still using. I think the Nano S is the right compromise for my needs. I prefer it to my mid-tower build because it has as much muscle with far greater portability, yet no extreme limitations like some of the tiny ITX cases on the market.

  • @tars3249
    @tars3249 Před 2 lety +482

    Compact mATX cases are a great size imo. Still gives you decent options for components that fit in the case. Easy to work with compared to SSF builds. Light enough to carry/transport easily. Good middle ground between Mid Tower and SFF.

    • @jameslewis2635
      @jameslewis2635 Před 2 lety +15

      SSF builds don't have to be difficult to work with, just chose a decent case rather than try to cram everything into half the area of a shoe box.

    • @neroz06m.20
      @neroz06m.20 Před 2 lety +11

      @@jameslewis2635 true but building something powerful and crammed in a small package like the geeek a30 or velka 5 can be very fun to build if you don't mind the challenge

    • @philallen7626
      @philallen7626 Před 2 lety +31

      Trouble is that good mATX boards are getting pretty hard to find. It is sadly falling out of favour.

    • @neroz06m.20
      @neroz06m.20 Před 2 lety +1

      @@philallen7626 that's what I thought as well but the recent z690m mobos are promising

    • @lukeclark4102
      @lukeclark4102 Před 2 lety +5

      Thing is it can also be quite hard to find a compact case that’s only slightly bigger than itx that would fit an matx board. the only one I have seen that would tick the most boxes imo is the meshify c

  • @Misfit626
    @Misfit626 Před 2 lety +20

    Mini itx is definitely getting more popular. I even switched over. Something about powerful hardware in such a small package

    • @mikem9536
      @mikem9536 Před 2 lety

      I've long been a fan of mATX.

  • @kylebrown3043
    @kylebrown3043 Před 2 lety +125

    Another reason for the popularity of case review videos, from my perspective at least, is that they are an opportunity to showcase physical innovation. Compared with performance reviews of other components (CPUs and GPUs predominantly) there's something really interesting about cases and water-cooling builds/tutorials because they offer up something visual, physical and tactile in terms of new features and different ways of doing things, rather than just looking at comparative numbers.

    • @ano_nym
      @ano_nym Před rokem +6

      Yeah, CPU and GPU innovations (at the layman's level) basically consist of "number go up".

  • @shdwmage24
    @shdwmage24 Před 2 lety +6

    My favorite case is the CoolerMaster HAF932.
    It's a massive case that I bought in 2009 for my first gen i5 processor. I purchased it because I wanted good airflow for hardcore WoW raiding during BC. Larger fan = less rpm = less noise.

  • @t.c.b4722
    @t.c.b4722 Před 2 lety +17

    I've always favored mid-tower cases. Big enough to grow and allow for good airflow, but not so big moving it is a chore.

    • @JETWTF
      @JETWTF Před 2 lety +1

      This right here, not too big and not too small. Easy to work with and plenty big enough for good airflow. The Goldilocks of PC cases.

    • @TheDarkMaster02
      @TheDarkMaster02 Před 2 lety +2

      Agree! I can never understand why people choose huge full-tower cases when they barely have any thermal benefits over mid-towers.

    • @brando3342
      @brando3342 Před 2 lety

      @T.C. B Agreed. I went with an mATX case, specifically the thermaltake s100, because it is white and tempered glass and like you say; big enough to hold what I needed and fairly portable, it was also within my budget and fairly cheap actually.

    • @tars3249
      @tars3249 Před 2 lety +2

      Moving my 5000D Airflow is definitely a chore... Another build I did in a Compact mATX case was a breeze to transport though.

    • @brando3342
      @brando3342 Před 2 lety

      @@tars3249 I love how easy it is to move around the mATX cases.

  • @SashimiSteak
    @SashimiSteak Před 2 lety +82

    I got a super large Phanteks 719 case that Phil's using because I love jamming a crap tonne of rads in my rig so I can run my fans at barely audible speed even under heavy impractical loads. Utilising even the mini-itx space at the bottom of the case for an additional radiator stack I managed to fit 2x 480, 1x 360, 1x 240 and 1x 120 rads plus a set of dual d5 serial pumps in there to keep flow rate up through so many components and travel distance. Ironically GPU coil whine became the loudest noise coming from my rig under load 🤣

    • @m4ster_root
      @m4ster_root Před 2 lety +5

      Having three Corsair 1000D's I can safely say that you really don't need that many rads for a dead silent build. It sounds sick though!
      I've always been too much of a chicken to build a custom loop...
      My newest gaming rig case is the Corsair 5000D mid-tower. CPU is water cooled by an AIO but my RTX 3090 Strix is fan cooled, yet all I hear is the card whining.
      I did change all fans except the GPU to run at ~800 RPM unless shit's getting toasty and I never really hear them. Even with a custom quite fan curve my i9-12900K stays cool enough during stress testing.

    • @SashimiSteak
      @SashimiSteak Před 2 lety +2

      @@m4ster_root Yeah you're right the cooling is way overkill even for a silent build. But it's fun to design and build nonetheless. I have a 3090 with active backplate to watercool the back of pcb vram modules, plus a 5950x of a CPU, and the thermal paste is now the bottleneck in terms of cooling lol.
      Yeah can't solve the coil whine. I limit fps when gaming to my monitor's max refresh rate so it doesn't always run at full power that seems to help just a little.
      Edit: You might want to also keey an eye out on the VRAM temp if you run your GPU at low fan speed. RTX 3090 is notorious for having hot VRAM at the back of the PCB.

    • @keibohow69
      @keibohow69 Před 2 lety

      @@m4ster_root with regards to custom loops start with soft tubing. And old parts

    • @TheKazragore
      @TheKazragore Před 2 lety

      I've got a Thermaltake View 71 with dual 420mm rad loops (1 loop for CPU, 1 loop for GPU). It's pretty quiet and even when the fans ramp it's just a gentle whooshing sound. It weighs a TONNE with all that glass and water, though.

    • @DailyCorvid
      @DailyCorvid Před 2 lety +3

  • @Landjrin
    @Landjrin Před 2 lety +101

    Running a ITX system in a Velka 3-like case mainly for the portability. I'm on the move a lot right now so being able to fit the whole system into a backpack has been super handy. The entire system is only a little bigger than the ITX motherboard itself moving this thing around is incredibly easy (You can pick it up with one hand, It's smaller than a PS5 or Series X!)

    • @NinjaSushi2
      @NinjaSushi2 Před 11 měsíci +6

      Please do a thirty second video on it!

    • @CODA96
      @CODA96 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Are you also really tiny IRL?

    • @Landjrin
      @Landjrin Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@CODA96 Why yes I am how did you know? :)

    • @CODA96
      @CODA96 Před 9 měsíci +10

      @@Landjrin It was the first image popping up in my mind, some gnome holding an ITX System in his hands, which just looks normal sized for everyone else 🤣

    • @BlackDragon-tf6rv
      @BlackDragon-tf6rv Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@CODA96XDD

  • @toothybj
    @toothybj Před 2 lety

    Love my fractal case. Best one i’ve ever had. Mid-tower size, plenty of vents w/ removable screens, glass door on one side…

  • @xXRusheR90Xx
    @xXRusheR90Xx Před 2 lety +69

    My first build was in a mid, my second one in a full tower. But lately I fell in love with sff builds. It´s more challenging but also more practical. And it feels like a huge success when you managed to fit your custom loop in the tiny case and every cm is utilized.

    • @i_am_macgyver84
      @i_am_macgyver84 Před 2 lety +4

      I built my first computer when I was 13 in 1997, the only thing I didn't do that my dad did was install the CPU. My second computer in 2002 is the only desktop I have ever purchased that I didn't build myself. That was a Dell Dimension 8200 pentium 4, geforce 4 TI 4800, top of the line then lol. Besides a laptop, netbook, and tablet I have built all of my computers and a couple friends computers. Having wasted all that time, I am very interested in buying one of those tiny computers by beelink or NUC or something. It would never be my gaming rig, but man are they small with very impressive hardware and able to upgrade ram and storage.

    • @racerex340
      @racerex340 Před 2 lety +13

      "but also more practical"
      How is a smaller case that is more challenging "more practical"? My view of practical / practicality involve convenience, usefulness and sensibility. Being limited on component choice, component placement and cooling when compared to other form factors, I don't see building in SFF as being practical. Fun, challenging, interesting, sure, but not practical.

    • @i_am_macgyver84
      @i_am_macgyver84 Před 2 lety +14

      @@racerex340 Practical is a very subjective word. Maybe they are living in a tighter space or maybe they travel and bring their machine with them. Yes, there is not much expandability but not everyone needs that.

    • @racerex340
      @racerex340 Před 2 lety +3

      @@i_am_macgyver84 I think I was being a little pedantic.

    • @Wooskii1
      @Wooskii1 Před 2 lety

      I get the appeal, but I'm all about dual chamber cube cases now. Just buy parts and put them in without concern of running out of space or future expandability. Also, I've always put my cases on the floor or on a low shelf under the desk. Also, also, the cube shape is easy to lug around and can chill riding in the passenger seat without much fuss.

  • @mazadorlord108
    @mazadorlord108 Před 2 lety +6

    When I did my first build, I went with a super tower because I was worried about parts not fitting. Phantex P500A is a great airflow case though so it works.

  • @dennissmith1435
    @dennissmith1435 Před 2 lety +3

    Top priority for me in a case is cooling/airflow, then the build quality and features, finally aesthetics. Aesthetics includes how the components will "fit" in the case. If there is too much room left over or too little, that, for me is an aesthetic concern as well as a cooling concern. I have generally opted for mid-tower cases.

  • @joelholpers2691
    @joelholpers2691 Před 2 lety

    Thanks, Jay! This video helped me a lot, and your videos are always fun and interesting, so keep up the awesome work! 👏🏻

  • @neroz06m.20
    @neroz06m.20 Před 2 lety +5

    Matx is my go to and im happy to see manufacturers make z690 versions since they got shafted during the previous generations.

  • @xbadjokerx
    @xbadjokerx Před 2 lety +30

    I remember my first PC - where i installed windows 95 through a ton of floppy disks - was bigger than any of those cases. And i LOVED IT!! Took 15min to boot but I loved it.
    Come 2022 and I only like mini ITX.

    • @Nobe_Oddy
      @Nobe_Oddy Před 2 lety +4

      yea those super tall cases were called MAXI cases... and there were MIDI and MINI -= well that's how I was taught :)

    • @TheMyname707
      @TheMyname707 Před 2 lety +1

      Was it a Chieftec CS 901 by chance?
      I have still its predecessor with three holes cnc-milled in the top. Yes, it was for a 360 rad. 😁
      Nowadays I going towards sff-builds with good airflow.

    • @Digikidthevoiceofreason
      @Digikidthevoiceofreason Před 2 lety +1

      3.5 disks were not called floppy disks. That name was reserved for the 5.25 disks. The 3.5 were called diskettes.
      Hell I remember the old punch cards and 8 inch disks we had to use. Fun times indeed.

  • @astro143_
    @astro143_ Před 2 lety

    I think that glass tube PC was one of my favorites that I've watched you build. Glad to see its still here!

  • @brattpack
    @brattpack Před rokem

    I am looking for a case atm, so this video was immensely informative. Thank you.

  • @Aldarris
    @Aldarris Před 2 lety +5

    It's cool to see that the OG glass tubing system is still around, I just built in that case this year after remembering that video. One of the few ITX cases that would fit my 280 and 240 AIO on my CPU and GPU.

  • @thomaslayman9487
    @thomaslayman9487 Před 2 lety +7

    i'm running a 4000d airflow because it takes up the room i have for a pc on my desk while fitting my components and cooling them extremely well :)
    i'm obsessed with airflow and fan setups so it was very important to me that i had a case that could accommodate what i had in mind in terms of cooling , and i got it for like 80 bucks too so it was the right price for me

  • @joshhofman8163
    @joshhofman8163 Před 2 lety

    Gosh, Jay, that IFixIt add is still so amazing. Please never change it. I love it

  • @aimedshadez101
    @aimedshadez101 Před 2 lety +32

    I had wanted an itx system since I got into pcs around 2014. At the time there weren't too many cases that appealed to me, but last year I got a SSUPD Meshlicious and a new system to go in it. I've loved it ever since, it's great to keep on my desk, and easy enough to take to my friend's house without too much hassle.

    • @aluckyshot
      @aluckyshot Před 2 lety +4

      Nice, always have wanted a small case then new computer time comes and I buy some stupid large tower, small is cool.

    • @mushieslushie
      @mushieslushie Před rokem

      I have a Silverstone RVZ01. I first built it in 2014. I liked it so I built in in again. Its not flashy, but I like that I can put it behind my monitor and it doesn't take up any more space on my desk. I feel like these days, unless you are going really high spec and plan to overclock etc., mini ITX is all you need.

    • @Nierez
      @Nierez Před rokem

      Sorry it's an old comment. Is your itx water cooled or air?

    • @aimedshadez101
      @aimedshadez101 Před rokem

      @Ivan Nierez it's watercooled. I managed to fit a 280mm aio in it. Works pretty well

  • @revanmercury
    @revanmercury Před 2 lety +13

    Last 3 builds I've done have gotten smaller and smaller. Most recent was Q58 with 11700 (w/ 240 Galahad AIO) and 3060 and temps have been great and it's very quiet.

  • @YOEL_44
    @YOEL_44 Před 2 lety +6

    My AeroCool Xpredator cube was the smallest cube (with horizontal mobo) that I could buy and still easily fit all my components, footprint is large, airflow is only decent and the windows is relatively small and made out of cheap plastic (it's an old case) but is exactly what I needed, I tried a Zalman Z3 in the past with a more standard design and it was terrible.

  • @dfredericks86
    @dfredericks86 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm discovering the beauty of Jayz - you speak the perfect level of layman vs tech part speak for someone who is caught between being able to build a computer and know good parts but isn't at the level of being able to fully customize a BIOS or OC in detail a CPU, memory and GPU beyond incremental basic safe bumps. Proper reservoir water cooling looks scary to me but basic self contained water coolers are plug and play - I STILL use an X61 Kraken and it performs amazingly YEARS later.
    Cheers for continually making the links between the layman and tech knowledge. There is a MASSIVE gap of commentary/content that hits the intermediate space for enthusiasts to really know what they're doing when building/doing low-intermediate risk tweaking.
    Steve at GN is amazing but he moves too quickly at a higher level for me to keep with about 20% of what he discusses though he seems to be at the cutting edge of hardware enthusiast reviewing - he distils his numbers down well but doesn't focus on laymen level education and drawing those connections with his analysis for others to maybe replicate. Jayz is in a really good sweet spot for me and have already learned a few more things through a couple of vids after years of computer tinkering. Well done!

  • @miketooantuh
    @miketooantuh Před 2 lety +1

    I've been thinking about joining the custom loop gang, and, man, I'd be totally lost without you Jay. Thanks for starting these vids up again

  • @beastdude
    @beastdude Před 2 lety +15

    Now I wanna see what's the biggest case you can put the smallest parts in, and what the performance issues would be. Given the space, a massive case with tiny parts and not fussed about a performance hit would make for some interesting themed interiors.

  • @schwanzmunster2503
    @schwanzmunster2503 Před 2 lety +26

    I ran a mid-tower for years until I switched to a full tower in 2016 and that's all I've used since. I went with a Coolermaster Storm Trooper-windowed case.
    So much easier to build in with my extra large hands.

    • @slaaneshgod
      @slaaneshgod Před 2 lety +2

      I have the same tower and also hate cramped building.

    • @anhiirr
      @anhiirr Před 2 lety

      @@slaaneshgod HDD were my biggest PITA the ribbon of power connectors colored sata cables etc....just ruining the aesthetic/flow of the build...HDD cages/locations etc and plug access when trying to troubleshoot drives too....fkn nightmare. So glad i tore mine out and chose not to ever use a HDD again outside of external drives. Running an itx build got me used to it...then going back to fulll...and having to rip my cage out to fit a front mount arctic push pull 280. Had me happy i had rear panel 2.5" mounts tool less too...and a hinge back panel so i can access them with ease. Sometimes updates/bios/chipsets make certain programs run finicky which is nice having a duel boot system or a secondary drive i can just plug in to enable duel boot.

    • @Dalagante
      @Dalagante Před 2 lety

      I don't have big hands and I only use full because it is just easier to work with. I had the coolnaster storm trooper window too.

  • @alexisschwindt1934
    @alexisschwindt1934 Před rokem +3

    As someone that modded the hell out of his mid tower one to fit more components that it should, I really get the use of a full tower or a super tower with shitloads of space. Im actually on a sunked cost situation because I already modded my chassis, but when the 4000 series gets launched, im 100% sure im going to use one of those phantek gargantuan 2 system chassis just for ease of cable management.

  • @ryanbrown908
    @ryanbrown908 Před 2 lety

    I went from a Corsair 465x to a Phanteks p600s. For me, the hinged door was a plus. For cleaning and organizing. The cable management is awesome and I'm a big guy, so the raw size of the case made a huge difference. Filled it out with a 360mm EK AIO up top and 140mm fans front and back. The grommets on the door also help to cut down the fan noise. And I have two dogs that are always in the office with my wife since she works from home. The modular panels installed when the pc is off helps to cut down from the dust of it just sitting there

  • @SnwwhtEI
    @SnwwhtEI Před 2 lety +3

    When I first saw the Phantex Enthoo Primo I knew I had to have that case it's crazy huge and big personality and it's 100% versatile and will definitely be future proof no matter where I want to go. 🤤🤤

  • @williaamlarsson
    @williaamlarsson Před 2 lety +4

    I have a Meshify S2, so a kinda between medium to small case. That's perfect for me right now, it fits full size ATX and 360mm aio without wasting too much space like a regular mid-size

  • @AddieB55
    @AddieB55 Před 2 lety

    Hey Jay, as I'm building my first PC I've been super appreciative of your channel and insight.
    I went ahead and bought a full tower because I didn't want to mess around too much in terms of space and cooling needs.
    It might be overkill especially because I'm going full Air Cooled (kind of scared to install liquid cooling, even an AiO on first build), but I'm hoping it works out.
    For reference running a 3090 and a i9 11900k.

  • @TranceHistorian
    @TranceHistorian Před rokem +54

    I moved from a smaller mATX case (Antec NX200M) to a mid-tower (Corsair 4000D Airflow White) because I wanted more than 2 M.2 slots. It really changed how well my system runs. It is bigger and more bulky but the increased space and the ease of building is welcome!
    Although the recently released ASUS AP201 case makes me wanna go back to mATX. 😓🤣😭

    • @russellgibson5733
      @russellgibson5733 Před rokem +3

      Antec NX200M is a amazing case!

    • @yaboystacey5578
      @yaboystacey5578 Před rokem +1

      I'm also getting the 4000d but I'm not sure if the 4070 ti will fit in the case with my z790

  • @BrisyTechBytes
    @BrisyTechBytes Před 2 lety +7

    I've went with an ITX build myself, although I have limited desk space I felt like the extra volume in my Lian Li Lancool 2 mesh case would help with the the cooling and for future upgrading of components, would really love a mini ITX build but think I would only go down that route if it could be water cooled....and I win the lottery 🤣

  • @joeseph2179
    @joeseph2179 Před 2 lety +3

    Using the fractal design meshify. It has great thermals, clean wire management, , room for upgrades, and it’s built sturdy! Fits the msi 1080ti well!

  • @aswinkumarkk
    @aswinkumarkk Před 2 lety

    I like how Jay does these contents. Always feels like the first time I am learning something..

  • @Nomokuto
    @Nomokuto Před rokem +1

    I love ITX. Putting and managing the highest performance into a small factor is just a lot of fun for me.

  • @john36855
    @john36855 Před 2 lety +3

    Case selection:
    1) brand loyalty
    2) part capability (I wanted an optional drive, lot of my files and old games are on disk)
    3) airflow

  • @ChaiTimeDataScience
    @ChaiTimeDataScience Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you for covering this Topic Jay!
    I work in Data Science and really needed to build a multi GPU machine that could work without watercooling
    I wish this video existed when I was trying to find the right tower for my build

  • @CursedDepartmentEastOffice

    I accidentally paired an mATX motherboard with an ATX/mid size case and it somehow ended up better than expected. The extra size was good for toggling around and I like the upgradability. It also helped that the Darkflash DK351 looks sharp.

  • @carlself3930
    @carlself3930 Před 2 lety

    I am quite happy that I went with a mid tower….the right balance between space and weight. Mine has a mesh so I’ve been able to keep the system cool with air flow too.

  • @rarva-760
    @rarva-760 Před 2 lety +2

    Great video giving the brief overview of the differences.
    As for my gaming computer. I'm using a mini ITX build, because I wanted a smaller computer and wanted to be able to take it with me easily when going to my friend's house. For the case, I started with the Lian Li TU 150, but that felt like it was fairly big after awhile and did some research on other SFF cases. I eventually went with the SM560 from Sliger, to keep the size down and still support alot of hardware. I don't water cool, which is why I didn't get the SM580 (no mid ground allowing for fans at the top without additional space for a radiator). So far the space savings with the SM560 is great and I haven't run into any issues with temps.
    When I build a computer, I take into consideration the use case of the computer and then will try and find an option that fits that need. As some examples, my personal computer and the computer I built for my mom, are both smaller and have good airflow (for their respective levels of hardware) because they use case for these required them being smaller. Another example would be my server, it is used to host VMs for different applications I use, so I needed space, and as a result, went with a large case (12 5.25 in bays on the front, most full of hotswap bays).

  • @ReclusiveEagle
    @ReclusiveEagle Před 2 lety +7

    Its easy to answer, based on Cost? If you're outside the US? *Mid tower*
    Smaller doesn't = cheaper with Mini ITX. Since Mid Towers are basically the standard, all parts are mass produced. So what often ends up happening is the cheapest Mini ITX board is more expensive than ATX with less features. US prices don't apply anywhere but the US

    • @VoidOperator
      @VoidOperator Před 2 lety

      Agreed. The ITX case options at reasonable prices has come a long way. SFX power supplies are at a bit of a premium, but got damned the boards are ridiculous. I'd love to build a simple little 12300k iGPU rig for a minecraft server but the cheaper board for it is basically still an enthusiast board and coast way more then the processor. Makes it impossible to justify

  • @Petermason_
    @Petermason_ Před 2 lety +2

    I build an entire new pc purely because of sff. I had so much fun getting all the custom wires and making everything fit perfect all while being so simple.

  • @evileyeball
    @evileyeball Před rokem

    I've just done a Fractal Pop XL air and I love the big space and being able to have free space between the Mobo and front fans

  • @FatSn8ke
    @FatSn8ke Před 2 lety +4

    I love SFF builds for their minimalistic and clean look. Mid-tower cases are the best in terms of practicality and cost though

    • @rit4089
      @rit4089 Před rokem

      I got all my pc parts today and I want someone to help me figure out what case to get u mind helping ?, I got a tuf gaming 660-plus wifi motherboard with a c7 12700,kranken x53 Rgb cooling system and a rtx 3070 ti gigabyte

  • @Darrolm
    @Darrolm Před 2 lety +8

    I went Fractal Design R6 when I did my build at the end of 2018 as I wanted a case that allowed me to put an ATX board inside it while also keeping it within the height restriction I had for where my system would be at the time. I also liked how deep the case was as it has now proven it can fit a EVGA 3080 without interfering with any potential storage drives I might add plus it had a 5.25 bay so I could keep a disc drive for now.

    • @cameronliddell9533
      @cameronliddell9533 Před 2 lety +1

      ive got the same case curently but removed all the main HDD drives (using m.2 drives). opened up the case so much and allowed for much better airflow. granted i also have a front mounted 280mm corsair aio

    • @abvmoose87
      @abvmoose87 Před rokem

      Fractal Design Big tower here too, theyre fairly priced and you can fit anything in there

  • @_Patrick_
    @_Patrick_ Před 2 lety

    Wow I remember watching your video on define nano s when it came out. Built my wife a mini because of it lol. Glad to see it's still around, loved that build!

  • @nickh8649
    @nickh8649 Před 2 lety +1

    Just finished my custom loop in a 5000x. ATX mobo, 3080, 240 reservoir, 2 360 rads, 10 fans plus rigid PETG tubing. It fits really well. Well enough that I went with an overcomplicated loop order for aesthetic (res>rad>gpu>rad>cpu>res). The case fits alot more than it looks like and it fills out really nicely. I had a 4000x with my components in it before while it was on air and comparison wise, the length between the both cases arent that different. The extra height gives alot more space than it looks!

  • @mgpmbass3616
    @mgpmbass3616 Před 2 lety +7

    I've always been a mid tower fan, but for the Mame table top cabinet I'm building, the small case will work great.. And with Mame, the most basic hardware will do.

    • @JamesW81
      @JamesW81 Před 2 lety

      gotta love MAME. I'd like to build myself an arcade cabinet, but unfortunately don't have the room.

  • @timl9495
    @timl9495 Před rokem +7

    Extremely helpful ! After two full tower (HAF) builds I thought about going to mid-tower, but after watching this I think now I will stay with full tower. Now just have to find what I feel is the best full tower that doesn't cost me $800 !

    • @awesomeruben
      @awesomeruben Před 5 měsíci +1

      Have you found a good full tower?

    • @Itspronouncednuclear
      @Itspronouncednuclear Před 5 měsíci

      Yes, I went with a Fractal Torrent. Awesome case !@@awesomeruben

  • @JamesSomersetActor
    @JamesSomersetActor Před 2 lety +1

    I love my 4000D airflow. The 5000 wouldn't fit on my desk but the 4000 fits perfectly and fits all my components in with no issues.

  • @oscarcharliezulu
    @oscarcharliezulu Před 2 lety

    Your videos are very useful especially with respect to general advice and observations that don’t age as fast as vids that just review tech. Maybe that’s why they are popular. Also the ads you do like ifixit are hilarious and I actually look forward to them.

  • @HL2Titanic
    @HL2Titanic Před 2 lety +33

    I've historically gone with full tower cases because I wanted to future proof as best as I could, and often had lots of 3.5" hard drives. My latest build is a mid tower (Corsair 570x crystal). I love that case but miss the extra space. Especially now that I just finished a CPU/GPU custom loop. Ditto for the cable management on the back. Not enough space.

    • @MrGrinchi017
      @MrGrinchi017 Před 2 lety +2

      Yep had the same problem went from Full Tower to Mid + Custom Loop and it wasnt enough space (IMO) to proberly hide and organize all the mess. Went for Full Tower again.

  • @experimental0000
    @experimental0000 Před rokem +14

    Full/Super towers are my jam. Mid are good too, but the large ones still invoke nostalgia to me from seeing the beige monsters sitting under desks or on a very sturdy desk/table from back in the day. Still niche use cases for the big ones just like mentioned in the video, plus those were AT and not ATX which means a lot more expansion cards for things that just weren't integrated into the motherboards yet, so you needed bigger cases to hold all of it. My biggest issue with modern cases is the fad of RGB and glass. I'd love to see more professional looking cases make a comeback even if it's black or white for the color vs silver, grey, and beige.

  • @kiki_aya
    @kiki_aya Před 2 lety

    I have two build, an ITX and mid tower.
    The ITX build is for playing VR in living room, so it make more sense to be blended in with the environment and be good-looking.
    The mid tower build is for daily use and the thing with mid tower ATX is you can use all 6 SATA slot for extra storage.

  • @petrobull2560
    @petrobull2560 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the great video. Just ordered the Corsair 5000D Airflow to upgrade my gaming PC! I like the case because of the increased airflow and ease of building inside. Gives me more freedom to do upgrades later down the road👍

  • @thomasl.3663
    @thomasl.3663 Před 2 lety +28

    I’m all about the small form factor cases now personally. Maybe I’d consider going up to mATX, but I love the little ITX motherboards and cases! You can pack so much into them!

  • @sparkymark75
    @sparkymark75 Před 2 lety +30

    Recently I've been going for SFF builds as I like the small footprint. I also enjoy the challenge of building a decently powered gaming rig in them. My current build is a custom loop in a Meshlicious with a 5600x and a 6900 XT. It all manages to be kept cool with a Corsair XR5 280mm radiator with 2 x Noctua 140mm fans.

    • @fabolousjada5070
      @fabolousjada5070 Před 2 lety

      Maingear makes the best small pcs

    • @anhiirr
      @anhiirr Před 2 lety

      all ive learned in my experience is...unless youre gaming in 4k....where a 12400 is a great NEW solution that is budget oriented towards affording a 4k capable gpu....Any other cpu...like a k series or zen3....will require a custom loop for ideal thermals and clocks...to actually get the most out of the GPU. Or else theres a fall off point. Where cost comes into play be it VIA custom loop or generally A good performing SFX psu like corsair. Where you wouldnt need that level of PSU/12v performance with a 100-150w gpu or a non OC heavy oc oriented cpu. The second i try to incorporate a 200w+ gpu or a high boosting cpu into the equation on a duel load...it gets troublesome/expensive to remedy. As fun as it is to build and benchmark.

  • @aubreybrackett7653
    @aubreybrackett7653 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this. I have given up on trying to get a graphics card at this point...and will definitely work on new case and cooling.

  • @Lukiel666
    @Lukiel666 Před 2 lety +2

    For me it was an easy choice. Focus G, because it came in Red for my AMD build. Also 5 1/4" drive bays so I can install an aftermarket sliding drawer to hold my USB 3.0 sticks. And plastic clear side panel not glass which makes it lighter. Took the lower included front fan and moved it to the rear as exhaust, installed BeQuiet 140mm fan in its place for even better intake.
    Oh and I put in a $20 cup holder. It perfectly fits those drink coasters that come with MBs and graphics cards. (I have anime DVDs)

  • @abeezy
    @abeezy Před 2 lety +27

    I went full compact, started out with an H500 but decided quickly it just was too big. Moved into a Sliger Console a couple years ago but I recently got an EVGA 3060 Ti so I can go even smaller. I just purchased a Densium 4+ about a week ago (they should start shipping next month). Having an R5 5600X and a 3060 Ti in a sub 5L case will be awesome for the LAN parties I still regularly go to.

    • @anhiirr
      @anhiirr Před 2 lety +1

      i swear with each gen leap it amazes me how much YIELD they get out of that small of a PCB/power envelope.... my buddy has a 2 fan 3060 and i just blows me away that it accomplishes with 170w compared to the 150w 1070 they sold to upgrade. Hell even laptops with their 120-140w "big boi" gpus have proven how well these various newer gpus operate compared to previous gen.....right up to the desktop cards...talking sub power level operation like 50% or less..or scenarios where you add a frame cap to a game....watching how my 3070 strix runs vs the 2080ti strix it replaced(at a considerably less cost). With the same frame caps across various pve/single player titles....way less watts overall and insanely better thermals/noise. I bet youre pretty stoked on that 5L build its power and noise of operation too withthose frame yields. IT really is just amazing to benchmark on a system that small and quiet vs what a 2070 or 2070S would be like in ITX. As if the pcb would even be small enough.

    • @angrysocialjusticewarrior
      @angrysocialjusticewarrior Před 2 lety

      Why are you so obsessed with going small on a desktop? Its not a laptop. It just stays under your desk for years and no one is going to regularly see your "cute and small" system.

    • @anhiirr
      @anhiirr Před 2 lety

      @@angrysocialjusticewarrior true, why do you care? pls elaborate. if you have nothing to add other than blatant general knowledge Go post this on some SFF vids see if you gain anymore knowledge about something you have no interest in since its worth your time...OOOOOH Senpai my bad DID you want me to care back my bad G>.< so sorry youre BIG D pc is so Gangster g. Its under your desk and nobody looks at it and it goes bleep bloop the end

    • @abeezy
      @abeezy Před 2 lety +2

      @@angrysocialjusticewarrior If you read what I said, I do regularly attend LAN parties, people do see my small build. I like that it's small enough to fit in a backpack.

  • @joelboags8741
    @joelboags8741 Před 2 lety +4

    I've been running the cougar conquer for about 2 years, i love the look and amazing temps being open chassis, i am running a custom loop and have been wanting to go back to a regular case, i'm leaning towards the 5000D just because of the similar components in your builds.

    • @dai-okami
      @dai-okami Před 2 lety

      Think I saw a cougar case called a "darkblade" or something along those lines. I was thinking of getting it because it seemed like it'd be very great for air flow and cooling. Glad to see someone else is liking a case from the same brand

  • @georgebenson3826
    @georgebenson3826 Před 2 lety

    My build started off after fixing a bios issue trying to upgrade the mother board .
    Ended up staying the the micro atx
    Using the Thermaltake corv12 to house a evga 3080ti ftw3 hybrid and a 2080 black and an aio for the amd3900x
    Loving it fits under my desk sitting on a small stand(tile floors)

  • @jamesmoss8312
    @jamesmoss8312 Před 2 lety

    I recently did a build in the thermaltake core v1 and was actually surprised with the future expandability and configuration options for a case that only takes an itx board.

  • @CCISolitude
    @CCISolitude Před 2 lety +7

    There's 2 cases I've truly loved over years, NZXT Vulcan - the side was all grill, great Micro-ATX case. The other was Coolermaster's 935/915 combo - you could take 2 of the 915's and side mount radiators on each, keeping all your airflow/heat away from the main rig in the 935. Would really -really- love to see a refresh of that design!

    • @Tadders
      @Tadders Před rokem +1

      I just looked into this, The CoolerMaster 935/915 looks like an insane case. Very neat concept.

    • @CCISolitude
      @CCISolitude Před rokem

      @@Tadders it just needs a modern take on it :) all that radiator support with current and next gen hardware would be a godsend.

  • @bjorksven
    @bjorksven Před 2 lety +34

    Tiny. Rebuilt my rig in a Cooler Master NR200P a while ago, overall really like that case. With a rear 92-mm fan as intake and tuning the voltage-frequency curve and max power of my 5800X the rig is crazy efficient and quiet.

    • @YouMadBr0Br0
      @YouMadBr0Br0 Před 2 lety +2

      Do you recommend that case? Because I just discovered them the other day and Amazon has a gorgeous Hot pink one and I'm in the process of building a PC and I have a Corsair carbide Delta mid tower which I'm sure will be nice when I actually get to installing everything (waiting for a GPU 🤦🏼‍♀️) but I saw those cases and I really liked the look and now I'm thinking about going to an itx build.

    • @bjorksven
      @bjorksven Před 2 lety +1

      @@YouMadBr0Br0 In principle I do recommend it, yeah! It is relatively small compared to something like a Fractal Design Define Nano S, so it can be a little bit finnicky to build in, but in general it worked well for me. One thing I do remember was having a bit of trouble mounting my 2.5" SSD on the PSU bracket, but that wasn't major. Double-check your cooler height, though! I had to change my Noctua U12S for a L12s that I will be kitting with a NF-A12x25 for more air flow.
      I have two 120-mm intake fans at the bottom blowing straight into the GPU, one (filtered) 92-mm rear intake with a RPM-reducer cable getting some extra air to the CPU and then two top exhausts. Also using the tempered glass sidepanel. I might recommend an SFX-L PSU because of their lower fan RPMs, if you care about noise.

    • @taxa1569
      @taxa1569 Před 2 lety +1

      "rear 92-mm fan as intake" this is mind blowing to me. I have 23 fans in my case not including CPU/GPU fans. 3 of which are 120mm, 20 are 140mm :D
      I have an ultra super mega tower case (thermaltake core w200) and it's 2 PC's in 1 haha. Also it's near impossible to cable manage. Omfg it's hard. I need about a dozen cable extensions to cable manage properly and NO. I already spent as much on the case as I did fans and fan controllers. Bottom/front fans in, top/back fans out.
      It's big enough to BE my desk.

    • @bjorksven
      @bjorksven Před 2 lety +1

      @@taxa1569 Sounds like you need a separate PSU for just your fans 😂

    • @bjorksven
      @bjorksven Před 2 lety

      @@taxa1569 I should perhaps clarify that I also have 2x120 mm as intake on the bottom and also as exhaust up top, it's just that I use the rear 92-mm spot for intake rather than exhaust, because otherwise the CPU would have to breathe GPU exhaust only.

  • @minidakota318
    @minidakota318 Před 2 lety

    I'm a full tower guy. Just modified my Haf-x for modern watercooling. And a 480 rad. Worked great

  • @rianriggs7252
    @rianriggs7252 Před 2 lety

    i love case reviews!! not many ppl do them anymore.. i consider it the start of any build and what you do to fill it.. also if im building for someone else i like them to pick that because its astetic.. its what they gota look at so they should like it..

  • @DartzIRL
    @DartzIRL Před 2 lety +4

    One thing I noticed about cases was how hard it was to find a decent one with an ODD slot. It's like they died a death.
    That said, I've used a mid tower with an mATX board simply because it was a CPU-only system and running a larger chassis made for better airflow with less fans. Compared to a small form factor case - it runs a fair bit quieter.

  • @shadowtech9158
    @shadowtech9158 Před 2 lety +3

    My rig I built a few years ago and that just recently put a 3080 (upgrade from GTX 770) uses a Azza Genesis 9000B, its a full tower. After so many years and new types of fans I think I might go to mid when I go to upgrade my motherboard and cpu later next year.

  • @Hatchbackiller
    @Hatchbackiller Před rokem

    I've got a 4000x, love it. Still has good airflow.

  • @SashOkVR
    @SashOkVR Před 2 lety

    I like medium sized cases, as you can put as many parts in as you want, and most of the time you still have more space to future proof

  • @I_Am_Hateful
    @I_Am_Hateful Před 2 lety +11

    5000D Airflow is my ideal size of case which i have now. that being said i really want to do an ITX build just to try it.

    • @Omen465
      @Omen465 Před 2 lety +2

      I have the 4000D airflow and I love it.

    • @supraman221989
      @supraman221989 Před 2 lety

      I have one and it's perfect

    • @urxtoxicxface1
      @urxtoxicxface1 Před 2 lety

      Yup I'm in the same position, I've been waiting to get another gpu to make a mini itx build.

    • @jr_3153
      @jr_3153 Před 2 lety +1

      I also have a 500D. I recently bought a Revolt 3 case and built a SFF build just to do it. Now I have a travel PC lol

    • @thetechrealist
      @thetechrealist Před 2 lety

      If you want to try mini Itx, go with the nr200, and stay away from vertical cases unless you want to go through hell for your first Itx pc.

  • @Wigglythegreat2
    @Wigglythegreat2 Před 2 lety

    I have the BeQuiet 802 and it's the perfect size for me. It's not cramped and has a little extra room to grow in.

  • @Skidd2
    @Skidd2 Před 2 lety

    I just bought a 4000D as an upgrade from a deepcool case from 2016. Definitely worth it. It is much quieter than my old case, and it's got actual glass! I was going for quiet when I chose it, by the way. Looks are great too

  • @notmatt5864
    @notmatt5864 Před 2 lety +3

    I decided to go with a define 7 for my atx build and simply love the case. Its a dream to work in for water cooling. For my itx build i stumbled across the sxm 6.3L and was blow away with the pc i could stuff in a case that small with little effort and decent airflow. oh, and i am working on fixing my fractal era as it should have been at launch. Wonderful case , no, but it will be.

  • @N3tstorm
    @N3tstorm Před rokem +13

    Might be worth to mention that SSF cases tend to get more expensive than regular and sometimes even large cases. In addition, if you want to try an ITX/SSF build, you have to plan your build ahead as cables will be your worst enemy.

  • @gamertechlive1780
    @gamertechlive1780 Před rokem

    SFF for cleaner table looks and easy carrying when needed.
    mid tower for airflow/water cooling.
    full tower for showcase

  • @PurpleKnightmare
    @PurpleKnightmare Před 2 lety

    I'm using the Raven RV-02E case, and I love it, I made it several years ago. Cooling, and noise were my main concerns. It has a 970 in it still...

  • @emresubasi4348
    @emresubasi4348 Před 2 lety +5

    Mini ITX is just a trend. Upgrade, maintenance, cable management, airflow %90 of the time is limited. I don't even mention SFF.
    My current build is in a mid-tower case. Next time I'm gona use something bigger.

    • @innocentiuslacrim2290
      @innocentiuslacrim2290 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, there are always compromises on cooling, price and expandability. Still the arrival of large M.2s and SSDs has made this form factor possible for the people who only need one pcie card. Its not for me though: I have multiple hard drives and SSDs, M-Disk drive, high airflow system with the capability to add in more stuff whenever I want. I do not need to consider space: if it is a PC component, it will fit.

  • @saveourplanet0139
    @saveourplanet0139 Před rokem +7

    Another important thing to think about is that there would be more ways that dust can get inside your tower if you chose a large case compared to medium or small. Be prepared to clean out dust more often with a large case.

    • @oceanbytez847
      @oceanbytez847 Před rokem +1

      filters out the wazoo, positive air flow, and place it in an easily accessible spot.

  • @kamk27
    @kamk27 Před 2 lety

    Great greatttttt information!!! Thank you sir

  • @bromyomedits
    @bromyomedits Před 2 lety

    I use a mid-tower case, I like the small form factor and I can still get great cooling!

  • @matthewparker9276
    @matthewparker9276 Před 2 lety +27

    I prefer a full tower, though when building me last PC the deciding factor was room for an optical drive

    • @MrShadow1617
      @MrShadow1617 Před 2 lety +1

      You still play older games on physical media, or what is that optical drive for?

    • @matthewparker9276
      @matthewparker9276 Před 2 lety +4

      @@MrShadow1617 games on physical media, music and video on physical media, and also burning a disc from time to time.
      Mostly it's for nostalgia though.

    • @TailsGuy72
      @TailsGuy72 Před 2 lety +2

      @@matthewparker9276 I do it for archival purposes

    • @matthewparker9276
      @matthewparker9276 Před 2 lety +1

      I got a bluray drive, because I forgot that the Bluray Disc Association seems to think that just because you paid for the disc, and the reader, doesn't mean you're not some filthy pirate, so fork over for those aacs keys too, which makes playing brurays a pain in the arse.

    • @matthewparker9276
      @matthewparker9276 Před 2 lety

      @@TailsGuy72 yeah, having an optical backup of finished creations is a nice peace of mind option to have in storage.

  • @Grommet2007
    @Grommet2007 Před 2 lety +3

    Years ago, when every feature that you wanted to add to a PC required an expansion card, ATX boards made sense. I'm talking about back when if you wanted your PC to be networkable, you had to add a network card. If you wanted it to have sound, you had to add a sound card. And of course if you wanted it to display anything, you had to add a graphics card. Oh, and with dial-up Internet, you had to add a modem as well.
    Nowadays most of those features are already provided by the motherboard (graphics too, if you use a processor with integrated graphics). Also, with the availability of USB 3.0, the vast majority of peripherals connect via USB and don't require their own expansion card either. So, while I would have said "no" to ITX in the past because of the limited expansion options, I said "yes" to ITX for my last build, which used the same Define Nano S that Jay used back in 2016 (I would have gone with the Torrent Nano if that was available when I built it last year). The only issue with the ITX boards is if you manage to damage the PCIE slot, you don't have a spare one on the board to use, but how often does that happen? :-).

  • @2qrank
    @2qrank Před 2 lety

    my o11 dynamic mini arrives next friday really looking forward to it

  • @windlockatc
    @windlockatc Před 2 lety

    Recently upgraded to a Lian Li Dynamic O11D, and gotta say it's the best looking case I've ever used. Love how it looks

  • @abidlack1980
    @abidlack1980 Před 2 lety +5

    I went full tower with my last build. I spent a lot of time looking at cases because I wanted future-proofing and the ability to add watercooling in the future. I had my last case for 12 years so I wanted another case that would last several years.

    • @vasocreta
      @vasocreta Před 2 lety +1

      12 years is solid, dude. I'm with you: I pick out cases that I know will last a decade.

  • @AdroSlice
    @AdroSlice Před 8 měsíci

    My first build was a mid tower. Now I just completed a build in the A4-H2O, and I gotta day, it's nice being able to put it on my desk without wasting too much space, and I feel comfort knowing I've user all the space available to me without sacrificing thermals.

  • @spiketamara2007
    @spiketamara2007 Před rokem

    i love mini itx and micro atx cases but i gotta say they take some special ways to get built in but i agree a mid tower typically is the best overall.

  • @evergreengamer5767
    @evergreengamer5767 Před 2 lety +8

    prefer larger case for more modern builds and tend to favor airflow, been using corsair carbide 400r mid tower in past 3 builds but do really enjoy smaller cases for older/low heat output parts or anything that could be considered retro

    • @anhiirr
      @anhiirr Před 2 lety

      exactly and in reality you still have to "set" yourself up for upgrade path if its ultimately the intent of the end user to have a"better" pc tomorrow. The best they can do to "SHAVE" costs towards those upgrades is a tower that has enough room for a bigger gpu/airflow.....buy a bigger/better psu outright instead of 2 down the road via gpu upgrade.....and a good mainboard that will subplant proper power/performance via vrm and said "better" psu once a larger core/power envelope or unlocked cpu is upgraded...then that eliminates having to buy a new board an potentially "faster" ram....once "upgrade" bridge is crossed....or else most ppl building "budget" oriented builds will have to buy a new cpu/psu/gpu/ram which really doesnt justify the "budget" build in the first place...im talking strictly ppl with intent of upgrading or upgrading once they generate a lil more income....Id suggest to them waiting 1-2m into purchasing in order to add those "FUNDS" towards a better mainboard/ram/psu. Bc at least even with a non k cpu...they can run xmp/oc ram, also tweak their turbo boost duration etc on intel up until upgrade time. If i have samaller or less....my gpu upgrade then becomes limited to pcb size....and cpu may need a custom loop to cool bc of upgrading...especially in the case of ITX/sff. There really isnt any money saved if some of these ppl that didnt plan their build right wind up having to buy double of half ther parts/builds bc of bottlenecks etc with a gpu upgrade. With added emphasis on PSU quality/performance and vrm/board quality.

  • @sidewind131258
    @sidewind131258 Před 2 lety +5

    For my "gaming rig" I use midtower (if you can call a define 7 a midtower), and for my fileserver I choose the Define 7 XL. Both choices are made for the reason that I have to have enough room for my hands down there, and they are a size 11/12 glove, and stiff after some 35 years as a scaffolder. The Define 7 XL could today have been a Define 7 with miniturasation of HDD's but at the time of the build, some 2½ years ago, I needed the space for HDD's, running stripped and mirror'ed disks, as I'm the storrer of family photos and videos and failure is not an option.

    • @bodinian
      @bodinian Před rokem

      I'm the storage guy for my family too. Redundant storage is essential. I have at least 3 copies of my family photos and videos at any given time, not including cloud storage that adds two more copies for the photos.