DeepCool Brings New Cases, Coolers and Some Pew Pew to CES 2024

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Introduction

We wandered into the DeepCool suite without an appointment (Ed: Oh no, you didn’t!) and they were gracious enough to take us for a lap around their offerings for CES 2024. Take a look at the case mods, upcoming cooling and at the very bottom, enjoy shots being fired from the DeepBot-Alpha-01.

Cool Case Mods

DeepCool was displaying a case done by LiquidHaus called Project Sentinel as well as collaboration units with METAPCs, StinceBuilt, Starforge, Gallery Panda and Xidax.

Cases

DeepCool was rolling out its CH160 and CH360 series cases. The CH160 is a mini ITX form factor case that has a lot of room on the inside for modern GPUs. It sports a handle on the top so you easily carry it to your next LAN party.

The CH360 is a few hairs bigger, allowing a micro-ATX motherboard to fit in it along with ASUS’s RTX 4090 Left Leg STRIX GPU which was standard issue to every single case maker at CES to demonstrate that it could fit (and play Crysis).

Air Coolers

On the air cooler front, the Assassin 4S makes its debut as a slimmer version of the Assassin IV by dropping down to a single fan configuration.

AIO Coolers

DeepCool brought along the Mystique and Mystique Plus AIO coolers. The Mystique will be offered in 240mm and 360mm sizes and sport a 2.8 inch 640×480 resolution screen on the top of the pump. The Mystique Plus will one-up that by coming in 360mm and 420mm sizes featuring a 3.4 inch 480×480 resolution screen.

The coolers will utilize the new FT12 SE or FT14 SE fans which light up in the center.

Pew Pew

DeepCool was also showing off a mod based on its Quadsteller case by the team at Apex Alpha Labs called DeepBot-Alpha-01. Its specs include a 12700KF, MSI B760m Mortar WiFi, 64 GB of Memory, 2TB of SSD Storage, a 1000W PSU and a DeepCool LS720 AIO Cooler. Beyond the PC, it also includes dual modified full-automatic x-shot chain driven dart guns (that are remote controlled). Allegedly it can fire 240 rounds per minute.

We got to see it in action – but watch quick as it’s a short clip.

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David Schroth
David is a computer hardware enthusiast that has been tinkering with computer hardware for the past 25 years and writing reviews for more than ten years. He's the Founder and Editor in Chief of The FPS Review.

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