
Cooler Master PC Cases 🖥️
Cooler Master Airflow & MasterBox PC Cases (20)
How to Choose a Cooler Master Case
Picking the right Cooler Master case comes down to size, cooling and budget. Decide on your motherboard form factor and cooling plan first, then choose a chassis that fits your GPU and radiators with airflow to spare. The points below cover the decisions that matter.
Match the case to your motherboard. The compact NR200-style small-form-factor cases suit a tidy or portable build. A mid-tower (ATX) is the right call for most gaming PCs — room for a long GPU, a 360mm radiator and good airflow. Full-tower (HAF/MasterCase) suits E-ATX, custom loops or lots of drives.
Cooler Master's mesh front panels are built for airflow and keep hot GPUs and CPUs cooler. A solid or glass front looks cleaner and shows off RGB but restricts intake slightly. For thermals, choose a mesh model; for a quieter, showcase look, a glass front works with strong fans behind it.
Confirm the case's maximum GPU length against your graphics card, as flagship cards are long. Also check CPU cooler height clearance if you run a big air cooler, and radiator support if you plan an AIO. Most Cooler Master mid-towers take a 360mm radiator — leave headroom rather than buying a case your parts only just fit.
The MasterBox range covers value and mainstream builds with solid airflow at a sensible price. The HAF, MasterCase and Cosmos ranges step up to premium materials, more room and showcase features. Pick based on your build budget — a MasterBox handles most gaming PCs well, while the premium ranges suit high-end or custom-cooled rigs.
Because cooling is Cooler Master's heritage, most cases offer generous fan and radiator mounts so you can scale your airflow later. Check how many fans are included versus optional, and whether the front, top and rear support the radiator size you want. Plan intake versus exhaust for positive pressure and less dust.





