It’s tempting to pick a case based on looks alone. A clean glass-paneled build with RGB looks great in your room, and there’s nothing wrong with caring about that. But if you pick a case that looks gorgeous and chokes your components on hot air, you’ll regret it the first time your GPU thermal throttles in summer. The right case is one that looks good AND moves air well.
What a case actually does
Holds your components, protects them from dust and damage, manages airflow, dampens noise, and provides mounting points for cooling. The order of those priorities depends on you.
Form factors and sizes
Cases are usually labeled by the largest motherboard size they support:
- Full tower: supports E-ATX and ATX, room for huge GPUs and AIO radiators. Heavy, big, expensive.
- Mid tower: the standard size. Supports ATX, Micro-ATX, Mini-ITX. This is what 90% of builders should buy.
- Mini tower / Micro-ATX: a bit shorter, supports Micro-ATX and smaller.
- Mini-ITX / SFF: compact builds, much smaller, requires Mini-ITX motherboard. Tricky to build in but rewarding.
Pick the smallest case that comfortably fits your hardware without compromising airflow.
Airflow vs silence vs aesthetics
Modern cases broadly fall into three philosophies:
Airflow-first
Mesh front panels, lots of unobstructed intake area, multiple fan mounts. These keep components coolest, but they’re not the quietest. Examples: Fractal Design Pop Air, Corsair 3500X, Lian Li Lancool series. Best for high-wattage builds.
Silence-first
Sound-dampening foam, solid front and side panels. These run quietly but components run a bit warmer. Examples: Be Quiet’s Pure Base and Silent Base lines, Fractal Define series. Best for moderate-wattage builds in noise-sensitive rooms.
Aesthetic-first
Tempered glass everywhere, ambient lighting, sometimes at the expense of airflow. Some manage to be both pretty and functional (the Lian Li O11 and Hyte Y60 are popular examples). Read reviews — some “showcase” cases choke airflow badly.
GPU clearance
Modern GPUs are absolutely massive. Always check:
- Maximum GPU length the case supports.
- GPU thickness — some flagship cards take up 3 or 4 slots.
Compare those numbers to the GPU you plan to install. Triple-fan GPUs can reach 350+mm in length.
CPU cooler clearance
Air coolers can be tall. Check the case’s CPU cooler height limit and compare it to your cooler. Tall coolers like the Noctua NH-D15 need cases with at least 165mm clearance.
Radiator support
If you’re using an all-in-one liquid cooler (AIO), check:
- Radiator size support: 240mm, 280mm, 360mm, 420mm. Match the AIO you’re buying.
- Mounting positions: top, front, side. Front mounts intake cool air; top mounts exhaust hot air.
Front I/O
Check the front of the case for:
- USB-A ports (the standard rectangular ones).
- USB-C — increasingly important. Some older cases don’t have it.
- Audio jacks.
- Reset button (handy for troubleshooting).
Cable management features
Modern cases include:
- Routing channels behind the motherboard tray.
- Velcro straps or tie-down points.
- A PSU shroud to hide ugly cables.
- Grommets in the motherboard tray.
These don’t sound exciting, but they’re the difference between a clean build and a cable jungle.
Dust filters
Look for magnetic dust filters on intake fans. They keep the inside of your PC much cleaner over time and make maintenance way easier.
Fans included
Some cases come with three or four good fans pre-installed. Others come with one mediocre fan and expect you to buy more. Look at what’s included and add fans to your budget accordingly.
Quick buying checklist
- Pick a size that matches your motherboard and isn’t bigger than you need.
- Confirm GPU and CPU cooler clearances.
- Prioritize airflow if you have a hot CPU or GPU.
- Check that included fans are decent — or budget for replacements.
- USB-C on the front panel is worth having.
- Read at least one thermal review on a site that does proper testing.
A good case will outlast 2-3 generations of components. Spend a little extra to get one that fits your needs, and you’ll be glad every time you open it up to swap something out.