Tamara Gibson
I wanted a case that was pretty simple and clean looking. It seems that most cases are geared to the gamers that are way overboard in appearance. This one is clean looking with a simple led line on the front showing that it is powered up. When I bought it, I was hoping I could change the front LED color to green. The inside is very well organized and it seems that everything was thought of when designing this case. My system was easy to build and I love everything about it.
NovaNova
This case is far from the greatest thing in PC building. It's fairly unheard-of, so build tips and tutorials online are rare, and all seem to be in Hindi (which is maybe not the best if you don't speak Hindi). The materials and layout leave a little to be desired. The customizability isn't the best. However, for ~$65, it's pretty dang good. It looks fantastic. It holds everything I needed it to, and it does so very well. It has some nice features, like a PSU basement, and some solid work space, as well as space for cable management, not only in the visible side, but around the back, too.Pros:* It looks really nice. Clean, simple lines, dark glass, and only slightly-obtrusive branding.* It has room for PLENTY of cooling solutions. You may not want to put a full custom water loop in this thing (though with some working, you likely could fit one), but an AiO or two, and/or all the fans you'd ever need, will fit no problem. Even with a full-size ATX motherboard, there's room up top for a couple Noctua NF-P12 redux and no issue at all with the 2 Corsair ML140 Pros I put in the front.* Had no problem fitting a full-size GPU. The Sapphire Nitro + RX 5700 XT fit with zero issue.Cons:* Only so many drive mounting options. The PSU basement extends forward further than you'll need it, under which there is space for 2 x standard HDDs. Would've been nice to see a third worked in there. There are however several (3, I think) spots on the back of the motherboard tray for SSD mounting.* Materials are only so-so. The steel the case is made with is pretty flexible. Not the toughest thing in the world, but so long as you treat it like a PC, you should be fine.* Some of the design thoughts are... not good. Like the popouts for the GPU/PCI peripherals out the back. There's only 1 that comes out with just the removal of a screw. The rest are perforated out of the steel the case is made from, and must be worked back and forth to work-harden their attachment points until they snap off. You might be able to put them back at some point, if you didn't bend the bejeezus out of them getting them off. For me, the biggest problem is that they were so close to the mobo tray that they were hitting a set of capacitors on the motherboard when I was trying to remove them. So I had to bend them completely out of shape to be able to work them back and forth enough to break them off and get my GPU in there. Not good design, Gigabyte. Not good.* SLIGHTLY too small to be totally comfortable working with a full ATX mobo. This was really only an issue with the above mentioned peripheral slots 'round the back, and with a couple of after-install mods I did (adding some lighting inside the case). It was just a little too tight to be ideal. Workable, though.All in all, this is a pretty good case. It has its flaws, but I have yet to work in one that doesn't. For $65, you could definitely do a lot worse.