Giant PC Case Doubles as a Living Space — Chinese Builder Creates Human-Sized Gaming Rig with Air Conditioning
A Chinese TechTuber has constructed a desktop PC case so massive that a person can comfortably sit, work, and even sleep inside it — complete with built-in air conditioning and RGB lighting that makes the occupant look like a miniature figurine.
The towering case, resembling a giant fish tank, is part of a growing trend in extreme PC modding. The builder says the project took over three months and cost roughly $15,000 in parts and custom fabrication.
"I wanted to create a PC that is not just a tool but an environment," the builder, who goes by the handle 'TechDreamer' on Chinese social media, told reporters via a translated statement. "When I sit inside, the LEDs make me look like a toy in a display case."
Background
Enthusiast PC building has long pushed boundaries of size and creativity. Cases that once housed standard motherboards are now sometimes large enough to hold entire furniture. This latest build takes the concept to its logical extreme: a computer you can inhabit.

The case measures approximately 2.5 meters tall and 1.8 meters wide. It houses a high-end gaming rig with liquid cooling, multiple graphics cards, and a separate air-conditioning unit to keep the interior climate-controlled. The front and sides are made of tempered glass, allowing for full visibility of both the computer components and the human occupant.
Tech industry analyst Li Na of Shenzhen University commented: "This is a novelty, but it also reflects a desire among hardcore PC enthusiasts to merge living space with computing space. While impractical for most, it showcases the limitless creativity in modding."
What This Means
This build is unlikely to become a commercial product, but it highlights the intersection of interior design and technology. The integration of air conditioning solves a persistent problem for extreme PC cases: heat buildup. By making the case habitable, the builder blurs the line between furniture and machine.

For the wider PC community, the project serves as a conversation starter about the future of home computing. Could we one day see "living PCs" that double as guest rooms or game caves? The builder thinks so, but cautions that such setups remain niche due to space and cost constraints.
Inside, the occupant enjoys a built-in desk, monitor, and RGB-lit ambient lighting that automatically syncs with in-game scenes. A small bed is tucked under the motherboard tray. "I can work, game, take a nap, and never leave my computer," the builder adds. "It's the ultimate productivity and comfort hack, though my family thinks I'm crazy."
The case has already gone viral on Chinese social media platforms, with many viewers joking that it's the "perfect bachelor pad." Others have called it an engineering feat that could inspire future modular living concepts.
For a deeper dive into the technical details, check out the background section above. The builder plans to release a full build log next month.
Related Articles
- Everything You Need to Know About Orion for Linux v0.3 Beta
- How to Transform Your Backup Strategy into a Data and AI Trust Platform with Veeam
- Reviving the Humane Ai Pin: Community Hacks Transform Discontinued Wearable into Full Android Device
- SELinux Volume Label Changes Go GA: What to Expect in Kubernetes 1.37
- Why Major Digital Health Firms Are Sitting Out Medicare's Chronic Care Initiative
- Mastering the Airversa QliQ: A Complete Guide to Your Rechargeable Thread Smart Button for Apple Home
- Why Good Designers Create Bad Websites: A Practical Accessibility Plan
- Bridging the Gap: How Designers Can Make Accessibility Second Nature