Steve
Bought this case and a few things to cover. It is ideal for those ATX motherboards which needs to get squeezed in to a small case. When looking at the case it does appear large, but you can lay it down flat and then it fits in most small areas. It does come with two intake fans (non LED) in the front so no need to buy a rear one. You can invert your power supply and so the air gets sucked in through the side and exhausted to the rear. I have a small GT430 Asus Nvidia video card and using the special PCIe adapter was easy to use. I tried with my GTX 980 Ti from MSI and it still fit so this case while small has areas that you can fit almost anything. Remember, you can remove the rubber feet and lay this thing flat.On the downside it is a bit weak in areas as the case will flex once you remove the side panels, but not a deal breaker unless you like picking up your computer frequently then this will be an issue. But if you just leave it be and just turn on and off then it suits well. The front mesh allows you to see any lights inside the case, even from your motherboard so this may be a detractor. For me it is not as my lights turn on and then off, but just an FYI to those. Last but not least is the cable management. All the space for your hardware came at a price; cable management. There is not enough spacing anywhere to run most of the cables. My system has one SSD, no CD-rom, USB 3.0, the motherboard off/on cables, power cables to the SSD, SATA cables to the SSD and power cables to the motherboard and CPU power. The GT430 does not require a power cable thank God. So with those cables only I was still hard pressed to make room in the case to prevent any cable from obstructing airflow. In the end if I had more drives, a video card that needed power cables then this would have been a more challenging task.Overall though the case was a savior since my motherboard was a big ATX and most cases today handle micro-ATX or even smaller. The case is nice with the black interior and window which when laid down you can see the inards. The fans are quiet and I used the motherboard connectors and UEFI to control their speeds. Ample room and the PCIe special adapter works like a charm.
Socrates LirianoSocrates Liriano
I love how compact and powerful I made this gaming rig. This unit can be liquid cooled, and has enough venting for air to move. However wire management is a bit difficult but with some patience and creativity you can hide and shape cables neatly out of the way. I'm running an i9-10850k processor, 64gb ddr4 2x32gb 3200 dual chanel ram by Team Group, msi mini ITX motherboard Z490i, MSI GEFORCE RTX 2070 graphics card which i had to buy used, liquid cooled by Thermaltake th240 cpu cooler ,(you will need to change fans to 1/2" thick to fit a large graphics card souch as the one i have demonstrated on the picture), Samsung 970 EVO SSD 1TB M.2 NVME and powered by a Silverstone sx700-g PSU. This case is big enough to fit all this power and keep it running cool. Everything was purchased in Amazon for the best price I could find. If you like the way it looks than you would love it. PS do not try to install a processor like the one I have in a smaller Mini ITX enclosure than this one unless you can properly cool it.
BW
I want to like this case. I'ma big fan of the ides you can have a full size display card and a full size motherboard in a smaller case. Unfortunately, this case is cheap. Seriously cheap. The metal is so thin that the plastic seems stronger.My previous go-to case was the HAF-932, and I loved it. It was big, sturdy, and easy to work in, and it was so well-built I used it as a stool sometimes. I have two of them, and they've outlasted the components I put in them many times over. That said, a while back I offloaded a lot of my computing power and storage to servers that are not under my desk, so all I need at my desk is a great graphics card and a regular motherboard. The design of the G3 is perfect for that. Half the size of my normal 932, and I can still have full-size motherboards and graphics cards. Unfortunately, they chose a low price point, so the metal is super-flimsy and there's an awful lot of plastic. I feel like the side panels could double as origami paper, and if someone were to sit on this case, it would likely collapse. I'm on the fence about returning it, because it does match my size requirements, but I really doubt this case is going hold up to a decade of abuse like my Haf 932s. Tangential to this case, I'm also a little irritated at the price/quality of SFX power supplies. I never thought I'd be happy finding a quality 500w PS for "only" $120.