Internal View Cont.:

The case has tons of room for a SFF. I'm sure
someone could probably figure out a way to get a water cooling setup in
here.

The only connection the case doesn't have is Firewire.
Special
Features

The front lights in conjunction with the red LED
fans, give the Rogue a mean look.

The
Rogue is made for LAN gamers and NZXT has provided an
easy way to transport your case. NZXT included a carrying strap
similar to what used to come with the LANparty motherboards from DFI.
The strap is easy to put on and it's a pretty quick installation too.

The strap makes it easy to carry the case.
Conclusion
NZXT has done a great job on the Rogue SFF case. The case is light
weight, well built and all aluminum. It's the largest SFF case
that we have ever seen, but that's not a bad thing. You still have
the portability of a SFF but room for all of the things you want in your
mid-tower. It has room for 5, 120mm fans and the fans that came
with it were very quiet. Some might think that a true gaming case
needs crossfire or SLI. I honestly think the case may be big
enough for that, but I couln't find any micro-atx boards that support
Cross-fire or SLI. I'm not going to hold that against the case.
You really can't ask for anything else in a SFF Gaming case and I didn't
have a single complaint about it. Club Overclocker
Recommended!
Note: Club Overclocker is
now using a new rating system based on a score of 1 to 5.
Please go to our rating system page for more information.
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Performance: |
N/A |
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Innovation:
|
5 out of 5 |
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Quality:
|
5 out of 5 |
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Stability:
|
N/A |
| Aesthetics: |
5 out of 5 |
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Software/Drivers Pack:
|
N/A |
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Overclocking:
|
N/A |
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Value: |
5 out of 5 |
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 |
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Project Skill Level
(5 being most difficult)
|
3
out of 5 |