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Antec 900 2026 Edition Full-Tower PC Case Review

Back in 2006, if you were building a high-end gaming PC, the Antec Nine Hundred was likely at the top of your list. It was a chassis that defined the airflow-first era with its aggressive mesh styling and that unmistakable top-mounted ‘Big Boy’ fan long before tempered glass and RGB became the industry standard. It was the go-to choice for anyone trying to manage the heat of a Core 2 Quad or an SLI setup, and it built a legacy of performance that many of us still remember from the early days of the enthusiast scene. Antec has arguably not had a case that can live up to those features since its inception, at least until now, because this is the Antec 900 2026 edition.

I’m old enough and have been in this industry long enough to remember the original, and it really did break the mold and pushed boundaries, especially at a time where innovation wasn’t really setting the world alight. Sure we had single colour LEDs and bigger fans, but that was about it. Cases didn’t have the unique features that we see today, even though you could argue that things have slowed down a lot with mass amounts of dual-chamber fishtank style designs that all look very similar.

Key Features

  • Form factor support: ATX, E-ATX, SSI-CEB, SSI-EEB, AMD Threadripper.
  • GPU support: Up to 495 mm length, up to 160 mm thickness.
  • AI-optimized GPU compatibility: Designed for professional accelerators such as NVIDIA RTX 6000 Ada, RTX A6000, and similar cards.
  • Radiator support: Up to 420 mm front ($\le$ 52 mm thickness), up to 360 mm top ($\le$ 52 mm thickness).
  • Included fans: * 3 × Tranquil 140 front intake
    • 2 × P12R reverse-flow shroud fans
    • 1 × Tranquil 140 rear exhaust
  • Optional dual 200 mm front fans: Support for 2 × 200 mm front intake fans for high-volume, low-RPM airflow in noise-sensitive environments.
  • Storage: Up to 9 total drives (5 × 2.5″, 4 × 3.5″, convertible).
  • Expansion slots: 8.
  • Construction: Aluminum + steel frame, 4 mm tool-free tempered-glass side panel.
  • Dust filtration: Front, top, bottom.

The 2026 version of the 900 is going about things slightly differently as Antec are looking to recapture the reputation that the original gave them, but with a complete modern twist. Since 2006, the hardware landscape has changed significantly since the days of mechanical drive cages and 5.25-inch optical bays. We’re not cooling mid-range chips and single-slot cards anymore and instead we’re dealing with 450-watt+ GPUs and workstation-class CPUs that demand much higher levels of thermal management that the original 2006 design simply wasn’t built for. There’s also a higher expectation for cable management, radiator support, and overall build quality which have also shifted in the last 20 years and simply putting a famous name on a box isn’t going to cut it so Antec have set a pretty high bar for themselves with this new model.

Specifications

Entering the market, we have what’s being marketed as a dedicated full-tower powerhouse. While it keeps the perforated front, it’s been fundamentally rebuilt for the modern enthusiast with support for 420mm radiators, a more modular internal layout, and updated clearance for the largest graphics cards on the market. Antec’s clearly trying to bridge that gap between that classic ‘gamer’ DNA and the features required for a high-end workstation or a flagship gaming rig. However, with the high-end case market now more saturated than ever, filled with dual-chamber designs and sleek, minimalist towers, we have to ask if this is a genuine evolution of a classic.

Is the design actually superior to the modern competition, or are we just seeing more of the same with a familiar face? It’s a pretty bold move to bring back such a legendary name, and users of the original model will be holding it to high account, and included in that space is me, as I had the original, remember it well and used it for quite some time, so while the essence of the original is there, it’s going to be interesting to see what’s remained from the OG, and what’s been changed to bring it into the modern world.

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Peter Donnell

As a child in my 40's, I spend my day combining my love of music and movies with a life-long passion for gaming, from arcade classics and retro consoles to the latest high-end PC and console games. So it's no wonder I write about tech and test the latest hardware while I enjoy my hobbies!

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