Tuesday, October 22nd 2024
GameMax Introduces the Vista COC Gaming Chassis
GameMax, an emerging brand of PC gaming components including gaming cases and power supply units, introduces the Vista COC gaming chassis featuring a panoramic view with its pillar-less design and the patented GameMax COC technology. The GameMax Vista COC gaming chassis comes with five pre-installed 120 mm ARGB fans along with the COC cooling fan providing a total of six cooling fans offering sufficient cooling to support high-end configurations. The modernized topI/O comes with a USB-C port, Type-A USB 3.0 and USB 2.0 ports, a 3.5 mm audio combo port, a power switch, and an LED switch.
The pillar-less design provides an unobstructed view of the interior - perfect for enthusiasts who love to display their prized gaming PC build. Aside from the ARGB fans, the Vista COC also comes with a side-mounted ARGB strip. The GameMax Vista COC is available in black and white models.Key Features
The GameMax Cooling Over-Clocking (C.O.C.) is a pre-installed cooling fan at the backside of the motherboard - designed to improve heat dissipation of the motherboard's critical components from the backside.
With COC enabled, the CPU, PCH, and VRM temperatures are significantly lower. This allows users to achieve higher overclocks and a more stable system.
Pricing and Availability
The GameMax Vista COC gaming chassis is now shipping to partner resellers worldwide. See pricing below.
The pillar-less design provides an unobstructed view of the interior - perfect for enthusiasts who love to display their prized gaming PC build. Aside from the ARGB fans, the Vista COC also comes with a side-mounted ARGB strip. The GameMax Vista COC is available in black and white models.Key Features
- The visible corner features a pillar-less design creating a 262° interior panoramic view. The front and side tempered glass panels are seamlessly connected for an elegant look.
- Equipped with GAMEMAX's innovative C.O.C technology for advanced cooling and better overclocking. It features an active cooling fan on the back of the motherboard, delivering additional cooling to the critical components of the motherboard.
- Comes standard with five 120 mm ARGB fans, featuring infinite loop lighting effects around the axis and a surrounding light strip design. The side-mounted ARGB strip adds an extra touch. The ARGB lighting elements support motherboard ARGB synchronization for easy customization of lighting effects according to personal preference.
- The front features a three-dimensional geometric design, offering a striking visual impact. It breaks away from the monotony of traditional cases, showcasing a strong sense of modernity and technology.
The GameMax Cooling Over-Clocking (C.O.C.) is a pre-installed cooling fan at the backside of the motherboard - designed to improve heat dissipation of the motherboard's critical components from the backside.
With COC enabled, the CPU, PCH, and VRM temperatures are significantly lower. This allows users to achieve higher overclocks and a more stable system.
Pricing and Availability
The GameMax Vista COC gaming chassis is now shipping to partner resellers worldwide. See pricing below.
- Vista COC - Black: USD $57.90
- Vista COC - White: USD $59.90
14 Comments on GameMax Introduces the Vista COC Gaming Chassis
At 57,90
I bet this is going to ooze quality. This reeks strongly of a case that you try because its so cheap and offers so much and then six months later you're replacing it for something decent instead, because its one big noisy mess, I wouldn't be surprised if something starts rattling too.
For higher-end boards this is a waste of effort, but since Gamemax is a budget case brand likely to be used with budget motherboards, it's actually sensible!
I agree that it's a false economy but these things sell in droves and Gamemax are far from the worst quality of the cheaper cases IME.
* Thermalright appear to be the exception to this rule in the PC industry, I'm just waiting for them to jack up the prices once they've gained marketshare like all the other heatsink and AIO manufacturers.
It seems there is lots of margin in computer fans and computer cases.
What you actually want is a comical Youtuber like Dawid to try and overclock the snot out of a 14900K on a super-cheap motherboard without VRM heatsinks using this case's extra fan as a hilariously awful solution to a self-inflicted, intentionally terrible choice of components.