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This bikini babe is has it all - beauty and brains. Katsuya Matsumura etched his passionate idea into a seductive PC mod to give you company while you work or play.
The Digg case mod is a one-off project by Computer-Choppers.com finished in April 2007. It was modeled from the Digg.com logo (popular social news website) and has been used as a show-computer piece for most of the summer at various computer events in the northwest. It has just about 30 hours of use on it in total.
If you are Hulk fans, you might love this PC mod. The PC features a micro-ATX motherboard, and lots of green LEDs.
“24″ Computer

Peter from Bit-Tech decided to create a PC case based on the popular TV show “24″ — resembling a weapon of mass destruction aka atomic bomb. Features include a large dot matrix LED display, water cooling, custom built double radiator, and a concealed DVD drive.
Temple of Nod

Created by Edvuld, this Command & Conquer-inspired case mod features a 2.3-GHz AMD 2500+ processor, 1GB of Corsair 3200XL memory, Lite-On 3540A DVD-writer, 120GB SATA HDD, custom-molded case, and lots of LED lighting.
Skeleton Case Mod

This “Skeleton Case Mod” by Bryant Baker of Roswell, Georgia features an ASUS M2NPV-VM mainboard w/AMD 64 Athlon 3500+ Socket AM2 CPU, 1GB of DDR2-667 RAM, 300GB HDD, and lots of copper tubing.
Pumpkin

A modder managed to cram a fully-functional PC inside this pumpkin. It features a 1.6-GHz Intel Penium M processor, 512MB of DDR2 memory, a DVD/RW drive, and lots of LED lighting.
Unidyne Case

This “Shure Model 55 Unidyne microphone”-inspired case mod features a VIA M10000 motherboard w/1-GHz Nehemiah-core CPU, 512MB of memory, and a 40GB HDD.
Vroom, vroom. Gentleman, start your search engines! This V8-inspired Case Mod is one fast looking machine. Packed with eight valved madness, the Engine PC is a true original.
The mouse is also inspired by another fiction and includes wireless RF-based X-Wing fighter mouse. Further, this crazy-mod-lover used a VIA mini-itx motherboard, two 2.5 inch hard drives with 256MB memory. Here we have got USB, PS2, ethernet, VGA, and audio for external ports.

A computer case design based around a retro look that is very pleasantly Steampunk called the DialupPCe System .
Bender

Created by Bizardo, this Bender case mod took over 4 months and $1000+ to build.
Porsche Nvidia SLI Computer Mod
Featuring an 18? disc from Porsche Cayenne as a shell and an attached acrylic disc brake strip-sponsor nVidia, the SLI-Machine wheel PC comes with silencer turned liquid cooling iron and decorative chrome entourage. The design may look weird to some, but after considering the unconventional ‘PC mod,’ you’ll surely give a second thought before disposing off your ragged vehicle wheels.
It’s a Battlefield 2142-themed case mods. Inside that machine gun-shaped case, it features an AMD Athlon 64 X2 3800+ processor, a 2GB of RAM, a 200GB of HDD, and a military-themed Typhoon Motion-Cam.
Whisky Bottle

This casemodder packed a 1.5L Ballantine’s bottle with an Intel P3 733EB processor, 256MB notebook RAM, 40GB hard drive, and 60W mini-ITX power supply unit. To solve cooling problems he drilled several holes at the side panel and glued an old VGA card cooler to the bottleneck.
Now this definitely looks like something out of a “Doom” movie. Technical specs haven’t been released, but we do know that it’s DangerDen watercooled and features “top of-the-line hardware components.
This amazing computer setup was designed specifically for playing flight simulators and as a gaming console. It features three 17-inch LCD monitors, an AMD Athlon 64 FX-55 processor, 1GB(512MBx2) of DDR PC-3200 memory, dual nVidia NX6800-TD256 graphics modules in SLI configuration, and a WD Raptor 74GB 10,000 RPM SATA hard drive.
Need for Speed Most Wanted game’s BMW.
This 1/5-scale model uses an overclocking ATX motherboard. The hood is fitted with handmade hinges using torsion springs and are secured with an ‘L’ bracket (mounted on hood) and a magnetic cabinet hatch (mounted to chassis). The 5.25 bays also use torsion springs but are balanced with the weight of 2 optical drives.
Case mod for The Dark Night.
If I could use a computer and could afford a cabinet, I would probably make one of these.
Suspended from the ceiling with pieces of network cables, nobody can complain about lack of ventilation with this one. It’s the second (after above) caseless case mod I ever seen.
The Case itself is made from oak veneer of varying thickness. It’s about 3 ft. tall standing (2.5 ft. walking), 27 inches wide, and about 27 inches deep from gun tip to back. The paint scheme I used was one I adapted from the African dart frog. The black is Krylon semi flat spray and the green is custom made acrylic enamel with a flattening paste added to it. The top has a 120mm fan and a custom bent piece of Plexiglass.
You might not have as many cool gadgets as Batman, but at least you can pretend. Everybody’s favorite vampire-esque super hero has just been made into an excellent PC case mod. Inspired after the iconic Batmobile.
A huge fan of Harley Davidson motorcycles, a computer geek with a knack for shaping acrylic decided to build a 1:1 scale Harley Davidson V2 engine. A case this meticulously detailed would be commendable, but this engine actually runs! The pistons fire and pump the water through the system to cool everything off.
Liquid Cooled Motorcycle Case Mod
This liquid-cooled Motorcycle Case holds the tradition of other vehicle themed case mods, but goes completely overboard with the modding, leaving the PC as just a footnote on the rump of the bike.
This cyberpumpkin was custom built for Intel to show off their Pentium 4 processors at the E3 2002.
The surface of this bug is outstanding. It sure has been polished a couple of times. It took 6 months to build.
“Yeah this sure is a shitty computer” … “Man that computer is full of crap.” … “Get a load of that shit!”
This one was built for a magazine in the spring of 2004 and is some sort of manga figure. But why do you have to see the panties? There’s something with this manga culture that I don’t understand, but this case mod is extremely well put together.
Made for the Mod Shop’s Comic Book Challenge, this Batman Utility Belt PC is, well, it is what it is. There are wires interconnecting the various parts—you can see the power supply’s yellow tentacles snaking all throughout the setup—as well as green liquid cooling tubes making sure everything is cool.
Are you worried that one day your PC is going to get so hot from all of that WoW you play that it will just burst into flames? This PC mod encases your computer in cooling heat sinks, surrounding the bad boy with heat exhaustion.
The original R2-D2 chassis was specially created by Australian firm Petric Engineering and was precision made to a high standard with small tolerances.
Source: vodulo.com
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