“Back in February we took a look at the Element S case from Thermaltake, their first case in the Element line of cases. Recently they have released 2 more cases into the line, the Element G and Element T. The Element G is gaming case that offers massive cooling with 4 large cooling fans, all of which have multi-colored LED’s that can be controlled, tons of storage capacity with 7 3.5-inch bays and even 2 2.5-inch SSD bays as well as a very sleek interior and exterior design. The Elements T on the other hand is basically a stripped down version of the Element G for system builders. Today we will be taki ng a look at the Element G.”Here are some more Cases & Cooling reviews from around the web:
- SilverStone Fortress FT01 @ motherboard.orgs
- Antec Mini P180 Micro-ATX Case Review @ Verdis Reviews
- Aerocool Vx-9 Pro Mid-Tower ATX Tower @ Pro-Clockers
- Cooler Master HAF 922 Mid Tower Case @ PCShopTalk
- Cooler Master Gladiator 600 @ neoseeker
- AZZA Solano 1000 Tower Case Review @ High Tech Reviews
- In Win F430 PC Gaming Chassis Review @ OverclockersHQ
- NZXT Apollo @ InsideHW
- NZXT Panzerbox LAN Case @ Techware Labs
- Aerocool Touch 1000 @ Hardware Bistro
- CoolerMaster Hyper 212 Plus Heatsink Review @ Ninjalane
- Kingwin XT-1264 HTC CPU Cooler @ Rbmods
- Noctua NH- C12P CPU Cooler Review @ Hardware Secrets
- Titan Fenrir (TTC-NK85TZ) CPU Cooler Review @ XtremeComputing
The Fifth Element
Thermaltake’s new series of cases all bear the Element name, with G, S and T models. Think Computers can tell you the difference between these cases in their newest review. Focusing on the Element G in this particular instance, a case which is designed with Gaming, Glittering, Gradational, Gigantic and Glaciated
features. If you want to figure out exactly what they mean by that you will have to read the full review. It does have a happy ending, so head over.