Game Max Starlight Mid-Tower Chassis Review
Peter Donnell / 6 years ago
Complete System
Affordable this chassis may be, but it’s still a great looking bit of kit. With our test system installed, it looks pretty slick and clean on the interior, and the cable routing proved pretty easy to work with; even if the routing holes are limited.
The big bright red elephant in the room is obviously the RGB lighting too. The rear fan and the front panel lights are synced. However, on our build, the GPU and CPU coolers are independently lit. However, if you have a compatible motherboard, GPU, etc, you can use software like Aura Sync to have everything match.
The vertical slot to the right of the motherboard isn’t very big. However, it’s just big enough to squeeze cables through for the 24-pin. There’s good clearance above the motherboard for the CPU headers too, which is often lacking on these more affordable models.
The GPU power cables can be routed through the PSU shroud at the back. However, I would have liked a routing hole below the GPU power connectors, so it doesn’t have to trail. Of course, it still looks great anyway.
The RTX 2080 Ti we’ve installed is a big cart, but as you can see, there’s loads of room to spare here. If you want fans or a radiator up front, there’s more than enough room to do so.
Radiators up top likely won’t fit, but there’s easily room up there for a bunch of fans if you require them.
Finally, we have the glass back in place, and it looks stunning. There are loads of colour sync effects, fades, and paterns to skip through. However, pictures speak a thousand words, so enjoy the pictures and enjoy the light show!