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The “micro” build: why your next PC should fit in a shoebox

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Fractal/Mr. Matt Lee

For decades, PC gaming meant owning a monolith: a massive, flashing tower that dominated your floor space. But in 2026, the era of the giant box is over. Components have become efficient enough that you no longer need 60 liters of air to cool them. The “Small Form Factor” (SFF) movement’s gone mainstream, proving that you can fit an RTX 5080 and a top-tier CPU into a case the size of a shoebox.

It’s minimal, it’s sophisticated, and it looks a lot better on a desk than a plastic tower. If you’re ready to downsize without downgrading performance, this is where you should start.

The quick list

The cases

Fractal Design — Terra Jade

The Terra changed the game by proving a PC could look like mid-century furniture. Featuring a genuine walnut wood front panel and anodized aluminum sheets, it’s designed to be seen. The “sandwich” layout puts the GPU on one side and the CPU on the other, allowing it to stay incredibly small (10.4 liters) while still fitting full-sized graphics cards.

Fractal Design — Era 2 Silver

While the Terra is rustic, the Era 2 is pure modern elegance. The sculpted silver aluminum exterior feels like high-end audio equipment. It’s optimized for airflow with a unique chimney design, pulling cool air from the bottom and exhausting it out the top. It’s the perfect housing for a professional creative workstation.

Lian Li — A4-H2O

This is the reference standard for water-cooled SFF builds. Collaborating with DAN Cases, Lian Li created a sub-11 liter case that somehow fits a 240mm AIO liquid cooler. It’s an industrial, no-nonsense aluminum box that maximizes every millimeter of internal space. If you want the smallest possible footprint with liquid cooling, this is it.

Cooler Master — NR200P MAX V2

Building in a small case can be intimidating. Cooler Master solves this with the MAX V2. It comes pre-installed with a custom 280mm AIO cooler and an 850W Gold Power supply, with the cables already routed and managed. You just drop in your motherboard and GPU, and you are done. It is designed to handle next-gen power, officially ready for cards like the RTX 5080. It is also 12% off right now.

Power & cooling

ASUS — ROG Loki SFX-L 850W Platinum

Small builds used to mean low power, but not anymore. The Loki pushes 850W of Platinum-rated efficiency, enough to drive top-tier silicon. It uses the slightly longer “SFX-L” standard to fit a larger 120mm fan, making it quieter than standard small power supplies. Plus, it includes an RGB fan if you want a subtle glow.

CORSAIR — SF750 (2024)

Ask any SFF builder what PSU to buy, and they’ll say “Corsair SF750.” The 2024 refresh brings ATX 3.1 compliance and native PCIe 5.1 cables for modern GPUs. It is incredibly dense, reliable, and features a zero-RPM mode so the fan doesn’t even spin during light work. You can grab it now for 20% off.

SCYTHE — Big Shuriken 4

In cases like the Fractal Terra, you can’t fit a big liquid cooler. You need high-performance air cooling that stays low. The Big Shuriken 4 is designed exactly for this. At just 67mm tall, it fits where standard coolers can’t, yet it can handle up to 200W of heat thanks to its dense fin stack and high-static pressure fan.

The bottom line

If you want a PC that doubles as home decor, the Fractal Design Terra is the clear winner. For first-time builders who don’t want to stress about cable management or part compatibility, the Cooler Master NR200P MAX V2 is a cheat code that saves hours of frustration. But if you need absolute maximum cooling for high-end components in the smallest possible footprint, the Lian Li A4-H2O remains the gold standard.

Omair Khaliq Sultan
I'm a writer, entrepreneur, and powerlifting coach. I’ve been building computers and fiddling with PC parts since I was a…
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