Friday, May 9th 2025
GEEEK Launches the Rhino Open Air Frame Cases Series
GEEEK, a Taiwanese SFF chassis brand, announced the Rhino open-air frame cases series designed for compact PC builds, featuring a tilted design with acrylic panels and aluminium block construction. The GEEEK Rhino M microATX measures 305 × 250 × 275 mm (excluding protrusions) and supports microATX and Mini-ITX motherboards. This model offers unrestricted compatibility with all standard air and liquid CPU coolers and graphics cards of any length. The open design provides complete freedom for cooling solutions, supporting radiator sizes ranging from 120 mm to 360 mm. Power supply compatibility includes ATX, SFX, and SFX-L formats with no length limitations.
The smaller Rhino S case is designed exclusively for Mini-ITX motherboards, featuring a more compact footprint of 300 × 200 × 250 mm (excluding protrusions) and weighs 1.1 kg. Despite its smaller size, it maintains the same unrestricted compatibility for CPU coolers and graphics cards as Rhino M. The case supports radiators up to 360 mm and accommodates ATX, SFX, and SFX-L power supplies, however, with a maximum length of 140 mm (maximum 150 mm). The white version features slightly thicker acrylic panels, which may make it a bit more difficult to secure the graphics card, according to the product page.Both models come in black or white color options, do not include front I/O ports and follow the same construction methodology. The tilted design positions the power supply beneath the motherboard, allowing for optimal component placement in the unrestricted open-air environment.
Regarding pricing, GEEEK Rhino M is offered at $49.9 while the Rhino S is at $39.9. Both models ship unassembled, requiring user assembly upon delivery (a screwdriver is included).
Sources:
ITHome, GEEEK Rhino S, GEEEK Rhino M
The smaller Rhino S case is designed exclusively for Mini-ITX motherboards, featuring a more compact footprint of 300 × 200 × 250 mm (excluding protrusions) and weighs 1.1 kg. Despite its smaller size, it maintains the same unrestricted compatibility for CPU coolers and graphics cards as Rhino M. The case supports radiators up to 360 mm and accommodates ATX, SFX, and SFX-L power supplies, however, with a maximum length of 140 mm (maximum 150 mm). The white version features slightly thicker acrylic panels, which may make it a bit more difficult to secure the graphics card, according to the product page.Both models come in black or white color options, do not include front I/O ports and follow the same construction methodology. The tilted design positions the power supply beneath the motherboard, allowing for optimal component placement in the unrestricted open-air environment.
Regarding pricing, GEEEK Rhino M is offered at $49.9 while the Rhino S is at $39.9. Both models ship unassembled, requiring user assembly upon delivery (a screwdriver is included).
20 Comments on GEEEK Launches the Rhino Open Air Frame Cases Series
While I wish these were all metal cases, I can't blame a small company like Geeekcase for using acrylic on their first go at this sort of product. At least the price is very reasonable.
I prefer real life pictures and not something which was pulled out from AI, Computer aided design and rendered or painted with a brush.
I can not determine how the manufacturing quality is.
--
AI generated with my inputs. Looks same as the topic above, not a real picture.
Anybody buying/running this be prepared to replace any device having some rotational device in this 45° orientation in two years max.
Anyway show us a well put together build not some AI trickery
And heck, your ai pic has several obvious flaws not seen in their pics.
Cable-free builds with the lights on and fans spinning are nothing more than pure lies.
I even gave the proof for it, for AI generation.
The real life product is not what is depicted on teh pictures. I pay the next coffee for you, when I am wrong. If not you pay it, okay? (virtual bot, which can not be collected btw)
I'm sick of seeing fake AI genearted pictures. I do not see much differences in the render pipeline. Regardless who feeds that render pipeline, CAD, some instructions, whatever, AI, ...
A few hours ago I looked at a gigabyte mainboard product page. Not a real life product. Fake pictures. Especially burrs, how it's really assembled, is much different as those product pictures.
-- I do not know any Nvidia RTX, which limits the card choices, with such big cooler, which limits the cards also, with only 3 Monitor connections. That product page is fake generated!
-- Shall i look more closely to those fake pictures? Maybe the product maker can provide us with which camera the photo was taken with which lens and which products.
They should provide us pdf datahsheets which includes the product pictures of any "bom" which was used to build that box.
You may ask the free ai software the following: generate me a picture for ...
Chill...
As it seems like a nice idea, but it's basically a dust magnet and on its own, hugely increases the chance of damaging things & will be pretty messy once cables are attached.
I kinda prefer something like this
or this
i bet it looks a lot less pretty with the cabling.
How about a video of them showing off the case?
So nice AI if they can touch it and show it from multiple angles.