
PC Case Accessories 🛠️
Case Panels, Dust Filters & Cable Management (20)
How to Choose Case Accessories
Start with the problem you're solving — aesthetics, dust, sagging GPU, or messy cables — then check the part fits your specific case, because panels, filters and brackets are rarely universal. The guide below covers the accessories people upgrade most and what to watch for on each.
A tempered-glass panel shows off your components and lighting and gives a premium finish, but it's heavier and shows dust and fingerprints. A steel (or acrylic) panel hides the interior, adds rigidity and dampens noise. Choose glass to display the build, steel for a quieter, lower-key, more shatter-resistant setup. Either way, confirm the panel is made for your exact case model.
Yes if you want to keep dust off your components and out of the cooling. Filters sit over the intakes — front, top or bottom (under the PSU especially) — and trap grime before it builds up on fins and fans. Magnetic filters are easiest to pop off and rinse. Match the filter size to the intake opening on your case.
These are the small parts that tidy routing: Velcro straps, rubber grommets for pass-through holes, adhesive channels and clips. Neat cables behind the motherboard tray improve airflow and make future upgrades far easier. Pair them with the cable tie-down points most modern cases already have for the cleanest result.
Today's graphics cards are long and heavy, and over months a card can sag in its slot, stressing the PCIe connector and the card's PCB. A GPU support bracket props up the far end of the card to keep it level. Useful for any large triple-fan card, especially in a case with a vertical or horizontal mount where sag is most visible.
Accessories are mostly model-specific. Side panels are cut to a particular case; dust filters are sized to an intake; brackets mount to specific points. Check your case model and the part's stated compatibility before buying, and measure the opening if you're unsure. A universal-fit part (like a magnetic filter trimmed to size) is the exception, not the rule.





