Featured

Game Max Draco Mid-Tower Chassis Review

Complete System


Building a system inside the Draco was pretty straightforward, and all components fit with ease; we had no major fitment issues at all. The overall build quality of the chassis is pretty good. Although, the internal design could be improved ever so slightly to make things look even better.

Big GPU? No Problem!

There’s a lot of clearance for a good size graphics card in this system, so there are no concerns there. However, routing cables to the graphics card did involve trailing them from either the holes on the back plate or the ones further back on the PSU shroud. Having a small hole towards the front edge of the PSU Shroud would be preferable as graphics card cables can then pass straight up to the card.

While it’s a little tricky to see, the motherboard 8-pin power cable is coming from the right-hand side of the motherboard. The wire then passes over the top of the graphics card and under the cooler, up to the motherboard connector in the top left. There is a hole there for routing a cable to the motherboard, but it is obscured almost entirely by the motherboard itself and routing a cable through will only make installing the motherboard a tricky, but not impossible process. If the chassis were just a centimetre or two taller, this hole could have easily accommodated.

Huge Airflow

This isn’t the widest chassis in the world. However, we were still able to mount a good size air cooler. Most of the common size coolers on the market should have no trouble fitting at all. Of course, with three 120mm fans in the front of the chassis, airflow is not a problem for the Draco, and with a single rear mounted 120mm fan, the exhaust isn’t going to be a problem either.

Cable routing space is limited and some of the routing hole are not in ideal locations. However, as you can see, the overall build came out pretty great. With a little effort, you can achieve professional looking build that is both neat and tidy.

Lighting!

The RGB lighting is very nice. It gives off a lot of light with vivid colours and effects. The chassis isn’t the only thing giving off light within the chassis either. Though the window, lights on the graphics card and motherboard are shown off to great effect. Obviously, RGB lighting such as this isn’t to everyone’s taste, but using the remote, you can quickly change the colours to your liking or turn the lights off entirely if that is what you wish.

Page: 1 2 3 4 5

Peter Donnell

As a child still in my 30's (but not for long), 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!

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

ThermalTake CTE T500 Air Tempered Glass Full Tower Case Black

The CTE T500 Air is a specially designed E-ATX full tower chassis from the new…

2 days ago

ASUS AMD PRIME B650-PLUS DDR5 ATX Motherboard

ASUS Prime series motherboards are expertly engineered to unleash the full potential of AMD Ryzen…

2 days ago

Seagate FireCuda 540 1TB M.2 PCIe Gen 5 NVMe SSD/Solid State Drive

Performance has a new name - FireCuda 540 SSD. With speeds up to 9,500 MB/s,…

2 days ago

NZXT H6 Flow RGB White Compact Dual-Chamber Tempered Glass PC Case

The H6 Flow's innovative compact design emphasizes GPU cooling with a strategically angled front corner,…

2 days ago

ASUS NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080 SUPER 16GB ProArt OC Edition Ada Lovelace Graphics Card

Blur the lines between imagination, the digital world, and reality. The ProArt GeForce RTX™ 4080…

2 days ago

Acer 29″ UWFHD 75Hz ZeroFrame FreeSync IPS Monitor K293C

The ACER K293C monitor is a 29-inch ultra-wide monitor that offers a full HD resolution…

2 days ago