Featured

NZXT Phantom 240 Mid-Tower Chassis Review

Introduction


NZXT have become legends in the eyes of many PC gamers, their chassis designs are highly focused on gaming builds and often offer loads of innovative features, cool designs, great build quality and more, the only downside being that all this glorious quality comes at a price. With many of the best NZXT chassis costing in excess of £100, it can leave many of us feeling left out as not everyone is comfortable with spending that kind of cash on a PC case, which is why NZXT has created the Phantom 240.

Based around the design of the rest of the Phantom range, the P240 has been cut down a little to offer the consumer a little extra value for money. Priced at just $69.99 / £55 it is taking on the very competitive mid-budget market, typically the price bracket most people aim for before you start getting into high-end and enthusiast level products. There are virtually countless great chassis in this price range and you often find each manufacturer offers something unique, most often in terms of design, to try to tempt you into a purchase, so it will be interesting to see what NZXT have to offer for this kind of money. Even more interesting is to find out if saving some money means loosing out on some of that legendary NZXT quality.

As you can see from the specifications below, the P240 is rather well equipped; it has room for three 5.25″ drives, plenty of hard drives, lots of fan mounting positions, with room for large graphics cards and CPU coolers.

The packaging has been kept nice and simple, likely in a bid to save costs, which means you’re spending more of the money on the product rather than on fancy packaging, which is never a bad thing.

In the box you’ll find lots of labeled bags of screws and fittings, all of which are high a quality and finished in black, perfect for getting all your major components installed. you’ll also find a fold-out user guide which talks you through all the major features and the installation process.

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

Toshiba Demonstrates Nearline HDD With 30TB+ Capacities

The race to advance HDD technology never ends, and while I remember my first 3.5"…

1 hour ago

SteelSeries Release 100+ Profiles Alongside Arctis Nova 5 & Companion App

The new SteelSeries Arctis Nova 5 is here, and it comes with it's new feature-packed…

2 hours ago

Chaos V-Ray 6.1 Benchmark Now Available

We love a good benchmark tool here at eTeknix, and we certainly do run a…

2 hours ago

Red Dead Redemption Rumored to Finally Come to PC

Fans of the classic Western adventure game, Red Dead Redemption, may soon have a reason…

2 hours ago

Nintendo Joy-Con Drift Lawsuit Dismissed After Five Years

After a tumultuous five-year legal battle, the class-action lawsuits against Nintendo concerning the infamous Joy-Con…

2 hours ago

Epic Games Has Been Fined €1.1 Million in The Netherlands Court For Misleading Children

The Fortnite item shop is often criticized for employing predatory tactics, particularly targeting younger individuals…

2 hours ago