Maximum PC

AMD STOREMI TESTED

What’s cooler than being cool? Being cheap, too, obviously

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We take the new drive tech for a spin

YOU COULDN’T ASK for more than this budget-end case provides for a very reasonable $70. Five years ago, a case with three RGB fans and a tempered glass panel would be considered wildly opulent, and priced accordingl­y. And now, here we are, in the age of flossing, Fortnite, and Facebook scandals, staring a budget case in the face with those very features.

Cooler Master has the kind of pedigree to pull off such a feat, you understand. It’s easier to put together a low-end gem when you’ve been putting in the design graft on higher-end models like the venerable HAF X, and iterating on those solid foundation­s for years, than it would be to devise a solid chassis from scratch. There’s not much HAF X DNA visible in the aesthetics of this MasterBox MB500, but the fundamenta­ls of good airflow, easy access, and solid build quality are definitely present and correct.

For a mid-tower, the clearances are all ample: 6.3 inches for CPU coolers, 15.7 inches for GPUs, and 7 inches for the PSU, which lives in a generous self-contained module at the base, and has plenty of space for tidying cables away. Even using a non-modular power supply with several extraneous cables, it’s easy to keep things neat by using the PSU enclosure. We did miss having a hole in the back panel above the motherboar­d to feed a CPU power cable through, and instead had to make a tight connection across the board face, but this is the only concession to the MB500’s smaller size and less feature-rich design we came across during a system build. However, the case got lucky that we don’t tend to build using a bunch of drives— there’s support for just two 3.5-inch drives or three SSDs, located at the base beyond the PSU enclosure.

Drive bays and cable access cutouts aside, it’s pretty plain sailing inside the MB500, with plenty of space to screw components in and make cable connection­s lower on the motherboar­d, despite just two holes at the side and one below the board. There’s a generous space between the motherboar­d mounting panel and the removable side panel, which means you don’t have to go crazy with the cable ties in order to achieve a neat look and good airflow. Just stuff unwanted cable lengths out of sight at the rear: Job done.

How about the look and feel of the case when it’s housing a system inside? Well, the plastic finish at the front proved divisive in the office, but the two RGB fans lurking behind the facade, along with one at the rear, are a nice touch for nuschool gaming aesthetes who like every component and peripheral in sight to be color-matched and synched. These can be hooked up to Asus, Gigabyte, and MSI RGB boards, and tweaked using the respective manufactur­er’s software suite to apply just the right (read: wrong) shade of weddingdis­co lighting. In terms of finish quality, there are minimal rough or sharp edges inside the case upon which you could damage a fleshy finger or arm, and our only real complaint is that the tempered glass side panel doesn’t sit quite flush with the case, but protrudes a few fractions of an inch further. In other words: No, the look and feel don’t tarnish the bargainous nature of this package either.

So, we’re altogether at a loss as to why someone wouldn’t pick this for their budget build, or even a mid-range build with its priorities in place. After all, it always makes sense to spend more on the bits inside the case and go a tad frugal with the exterior—not that lit fans and glass panels are all that frugal…. Unless you really need more than three drives installed, this should be your first considerat­ion for a sub-$100 case. –PHIL IWANIUK

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