Oh yes, these fancy origami PC cases now support water cooling.

General
Oh yes, these fancy origami PC cases now support water cooling.

Checking out what InWin is up to in the PC case arena, it looks like the DIY foldable iBuild iShare POC series has a new addition. This little Mini-ITX origami case has been color refreshed and now supports water cooling.

InWin's Computex booth also displayed the not-so-large original POC Mini-ITX folding PC case along with a small pre-folded sample. This eco-friendly origami case is packed full-flat in a small sleeve and packaged in a pizza box-style package for folding at home; the OG version is available in black and blue or green and yellow (the latter is my favorite, but not everyone's taste).

As a Mini-ITX design, it supports a single 2.5" drive, a 346 x 82mm, vertically mounted GPU (yes, the RTX 4090 Founders Edition fits), and a CPU cooler no taller than 142mm. Also included is an InWin Luna AL120 fan to aid cooling.

And while the case dimensions have not changed, the new POC Liquid Cooling Edition now supports a single 240mm liquid cooling radiator. In addition, it is now available in pink and purple, or orange and cobalt blue. [I came for the bright colors and stayed for the impeccable design.

To give you a little background, I am not much of an origami person. I made an aquarium once, but when I saw my friend make a water dragon out of origami paper as long as a foot, I gave up because I knew I would never be able to do it. She's now using her creative talents to make cool mugs for D&D, and with the latest POC edition of InWin, I may be able to get back into this again and unleash my DIY passion on something actually relevant to my career.

It may not be a water dragon, but it is water-cooled.

I'll have to clear some cupboard space for the POC Mini-ITX Liquid Cooling Edition.

Nor is InWin a company known for interesting designs. Take, for example, its $4,000 3D printed case. But if that's too rich for your blood or DIY is more your style (same), POC might be a bit more to your liking. Or maybe you prefer the company's less flashy flat-packed PC cases, which Jacob discovered.

Categories