![]() ![]() This equates to approximately $1,500 worth of hardware and software (Windows 11) depending on the premium price you put on the custom chassis and the specialized version of the motherboard and GPU. All of this comes packaged in a custom chassis designed for special in-game cable management. The base configuration consists of an Intel 12th Gen Core i5-12400F 6-core/12-thread processor clocked at 2.5GHz to 4.4GHz, Cooler Master Hyper 212 RGB air cooler, Gigabyte Z690 Aorus Elite Stealth motherboard, 16GB Fury Beast RGB DDR5-5200 RAM, GeForce RTX 3070 Stealth, 512GB Intel 670p SSD, EVGA 750W SuperNova Power Supply, and Windows 11 Home. Setting Up a Maingear Stealth Gaming PCįor anyone interested, Maingear’s Stealth Gaming PC pricing starts at $1,999 for a modest configuration. The result is an ultra-clean design with no wires or cables to get in the way of airflow. This unique design effectively hides all cables from view, with only the all-in-one CPU cooler tubing visible from the front. This includes ports for ATX power, CPU power, fans, USB, audio, panel and much more,” Maingear said in a press release earlier this year. ![]() “Utilizing Maingear’s revolutionary patent, Gigabyte’s Project Stealth moves all cable connectors to the rear of the motherboard for a simplified setup. And so, he worked with Gigabyte to bring Project Stealth to market. Long story short, Santos was more interested in seeing this innovative design come to fruition and boost the industry, than filing lawsuits. There was a bit of controversy as Gigabyte didn’t credit Maingear at the time, and we talked about it with Maingear CEO Wallace Santos in a 2.5 Geeks webcast last December. Then earlier this year, Gigabyte Aorus’ official Twitter account in France posted some renderings of the “Project Stealth” concept. ![]()
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