Business

This ridiculous shoe PC went from a 10-week mod project to a $6,000 custom Cooler Master gaming PC you can actually buy-

A couple of years back I had the pleasure of being part of the judging panel for Cooler Master’s Case Mod World Series (CMWS), a PC building contest that, frankly, blew my humble PC building sensibilities out of the water. Since then, the company has been working on bringing a couple of gaming PC designs to market based on design entries from the contest.

The results are the Cooling X and Sneaker X systems, both of which really seem to capture the wild and wonderful essence of the CMWS.

Both coming in as compact designs, the Sneaker X is a literal shoe design with high-end components packed into a Mini-ITX case that’s just 650 x 306 x 651mm / 25.6 x 12.0 x 25.6 inches in size. 

The Cooling X is a little larger at 266 x 149.4 x 371.6 mm / 10.5 x 5.9 x 14.6 inches, and features a liquid-cooled RTX 4080 and AMD Ryzen 9 7950X with the side panels also doubling as liquid-cooling chambers.

If that’s not a smart use of space, I don’t know what is.

Our Tyler W put the name of the Sneaker X into perspective for me, “Like a Sneaker but more Xtreme (because it’s not a sneaker, it’s a computer).” It has similar vibes to NZXT & RTFKT’s RTX 3080-powered sneaker PC, though it’s got space for a chonky RTX 4080 inside that Mini-ITX case. It also comes with Cooler Master’s Flux 360 Special Edition radiator, though there’s only space for a single 2.5-inch SSD drive bay.

I had the pleasure of speaking to JDMF, makers of the original design for the Sneaker X that won the contest. They said the build took around 10 weeks from design through to completion, and that they would have liked to have included more patterning and nicer colours. For the standard version it looks like Cooler Master has stayed pretty true to the original design. 

There is talk of special edition colourways in the press release, though, so it will be interesting to see if we get some versions with funky patterning. 

My main concern in the Sneaker X coming to market is cooling. With JDMF having run into so much trouble bending the water tubes around inside such a small case originally, we’ll have to see how it fairs on the cooling side of things.

Here’s the original JDMF sneaker PC worklog, for the full story.

Cooler Master is calling the Sneaker X “a fusion of luxury and performance.” So if plonking a giant shoe on your desktop says luxury to you, then this ridiculous $5,999 gaming PC may be the system for you, coming early July. Otherwise, in late June the slightly more subtle Cooling X will be in stores. That might be more up your street, though it does come in at a slightly more expensive $6,999. 

That’s about a $3,000 dollar premium on what we’d expect to pay for a system of this spec, so maybe weigh up the options on our cheap gaming PC deals page before you dive in. I might just print a sneaker sticker and pop it on the side of one of the ones on that list instead, because my wallet is hurting just thinking about a $7,000 gaming PC. 

Related Posts

Skyrim player gathers all the food in every city, eats it all and instantly dies thanks to one killer snack-

Today I witnessed someone’s Skyrim character die in one of the most Monty Pythonesque ways possible: by eating all the food in all the land and bursting like a stuck pig.

User amelix34 took to the Skyrim subreddit just the other day to reveal a little experiment they’d been saving up for in the form of a heavy gorging fest (via GamesRadar). 

You’ve seen the jokes. “Wait one second,” you say to your enemy, mid-battle, as you pause to look at the menu and consume everything in your inventory in an attempt to heal up. But what would happen if you ate 20,000 gold’s worth of food all in one go? Would it still heal you, or would it send you spiralling into a food-induced coma?

As it turns out, this player’s character died horrifically because of it, but not for the reas…

Nightingale is off to a strong start but it’s also got a ‘mixed’ user rating on Steam, and once again server problems are largely to blame-

The alt-Victorian survival game Nightingale launched yesterday, and after a full day of release on Steam it’s now laboring under a less-than-stellar “mixed” user rating. Reasons for the complaints are varied, but the main culprit seems to be one we’re all familiar with by now: the servers.

The frustrations with Nightingale are exacerbated by the need to be connected to play, even if you’re going solo. Quite a few user reviews on Steam are actually positive about the game overall, but throw it a thumbs-down anyway because of server wonkiness.

“I REALLY like a lot of this game so far, but this is getting a negative for one giant issue,” one Steam user wrote. “Being always online, even when playing solo, is absolute nonsense. There is no reason a game like this has to be online…

Red Dead Redemption 2 receives unexpected HDR10+ support, reminding us all that there are still cowboys moseying out there somewhere-

Personally, it brings me some amount of peace to know that, somewhere in the world, people are still firing up Red Dead Redemption 2 and stepping through a doorway back across time to a world that moved according to the deeds of steely-eyed gunslingers and, more importantly, their steely-eyed horses. Even if I’ve moved on in my fascinations, they’re still riding those dusty trails, picking wild carrots and—if my own experience was at all representative of the norm—getting mauled soon after by a large mountain cat. And now, according to the patch notes from a Red Dead Redemption 2 title update that dropped yesterday, that mauling can be enjoyed in glorious HDR10+ splendor.

After all, can it truly be the Wild West without a full, vivid range of contrast and brigh…

Paradox indefinitely delays Prison Architect 2, just like it did with Life By You before it was scrapped-

Prison Architect 2 is delayed yet again, but this time, it could be for good. We’ve seen the upcoming management game delayed before—due to “new technical challenges” that warranted developers spending more time on stability testing. However, this time, the issue’s  more pronounced. 

“Our continuous internal reviews and beta test groups have highlighted areas that we need to focus on more, mainly performance and content, which we need to address before launch to ensure that you, the players, get a good experience in the game,” the Prison Architect 2 team says in a blog post. “We need to raise the quality a bit more to meet the standards we’d like to achieve with this sequel.”

However, Paradox has also confirmed that it cannot “commit to a new release date” as…

The Baldur’s Gate 3 council of sages (or Larian Studios, if you want to be boring) meets on holy ground to discuss ‘lift off’ for its next big game-

Around two years ago, a wise council of sages, artificers, and mages from across the realm (a collection of people sometimes called a “game development studio”) met in an officious chamber to discuss how to finish Baldur’s Gate 3, a game that would go on to steal about 200 hours of my life—and gain one of PC Gamer’s highest review scores, period.

That’s according to Larian CEO and co-founder Swen Vincke himself, as per a recent post to Twitter. In it, Vincke shows the hallowed halls in which the game developer held a summit yesterday: “2 years ago we came to this exact place to discuss how to finish BG3. This time around it’s to discuss lift off. Spirits are high, morale is good, expecting a flooding any minute now.”

As for exactly what that game is, we’re only a…

This new Humble Bundle has all the Myst except Pyst for just $20-

Myst is a divisive game, to put it mildly. It helped drive widespread adoption of CD-ROM drives and for years reigned as the best-selling videogame of all time, but it’s also widely derided for its static vistas and obtuse puzzles. I loved it; PC Gamer contributor Richard Cobbett, on the other hand, once described it as the videogame equivalent of chugging a big mouthful of orange juice right after brushing your teeth.

If you’re not sure where you fall on that particular love-it-or-hate-it spectrum, here’s a great chance to find out: the Myst and More Redux collection from Humble Bundle, which includes just about every Myst game ever made, plus a few others from developer Cyan Worlds. For a minimum of $10, you get:

  • Myst: Masterpiece Edition
  • realMyst: Mastesrpiec…