When boutique PC maker Maingear contacted me about sending out a loaner F131 system for review, I had no idea that I would soon be face-to-face with the most attractive machine ever to grace my computer desk.
Of course beauty is in the eye of the beholderânot everyone is as big a fan of the pink and yellow as I amâbut thereâs no denying the technical proficiency that went into making the F131 case look this good. Maingearâs painting process involves powerful technology, top-of-the-line materials and decades of experience, resulting in a unique luxury car quality finish (that doesnât have to be pink with a Kotaku logo on it).
The extravagance that goes into making the exterior of the F131 so striking isnât just a flashy gimmick to draw the eye; itâs an extension of the philosophy that makes Maingearâs machines some of the more powerful PC gaming machines on the market.
Itâs funny, because my introduction to Maingear several years ago was nowhere near as spectacular. Iâve been using one of the companyâs incredibly compact X-Cube systems for three years now, and though it has served me well I obviously havenât been too concerned about how it looks
https://lastchance.cc/show-me-your-gaming-rig-and-ill-show-you-mine-5893301%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
I know the outside of a gaming PC means little in the grand scheme of things, but just look at it.
Okay, enough about the candy coating, letâs break this baby open.
The beauty of the new Maingear F131 is far from skin deep. The vertical exhaust chassis employed by the unit is the model of efficiency and utility. Stripping the sides reveals a deft use of the minimal space available. The 2TB Seagate Barracuda drive and its 60GB Corsair caching SSD companion are strapped to one side like plastic explosives. A plug-and-play SATA drive bay accessed through the top of the system gave my 1TB external media drive a convenient place to hide while the system is in my possession.
The Maingear Super Stock F131
Review configuration:
â˘Chassis: F131 with VRTX Cooling Technology
â˘Motherboard: Asus Maximus V Gene
â˘Processor: Intel Core i7 3770K 3.5GHz/3.9GHz Turbo 8MB L3 Cache HD 4000
â˘Processor Cooling: Maingear Epic 120 Supercooler
â˘Memory: 8GB Corsair Dominator Platinum DDR3-1600
â˘Graphics: 2x NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660 Ti 4GB Total
â˘Power Supply: 660 Watt SeasonicÂŽX-660 80+
â˘SSD Caching: 60GB Corsair Accelerator SSD Caching Drive
â˘Hard Drive: 2TB Seagate Barracuda 7200rpm
â˘Optical Drive: 8X Dual Layer DVD RW
â˘Audio: Asus SupremeFX III X-Fi THX TrueStudio Pro Premium Audio
â˘Ethernet Adapter: On-board Gigabit Ethernet
â˘Operating System: Microsoft Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
â˘Warranty: Lifetime Angelic Service Labor and Phone Support with 3 Year Hardware Warranty
Price: $2,569
The opposite side gives us a lovely view of the two PCI slots, a cramped fit for a pair of full-length 2GB NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660 Ti cards (I was trying out a GTX 690 when I took these shots). Thereâs the Maingear Epic 120 Supercoolerâmy first experience with liquid cooling (I know, right?). Itâs keeping the Intel Core i7 3770K nice and frosty.
Youâll also notice one of the common issues with a vertical exhaust chassis. Someone should have given his desk a good cleaning before hooking up the PC. Since air is drawn from the bottom of the unit and released through the top, any dust beneath the machine isnât beneath for very long. On the plus side the bit of my desk directly under the unit is pretty clean nowâyeah, Iâll dust more often.
A vertical exhaust chassis also means that all of the systemâs ports wind up on top of the system. Indentations on the back and sides of the case allow cables to pass through, while the whole affair is covered with a plastic grill. Considering how often I swap out computer accessories every day, I soon found myself setting the grill aside, reveling in the cables blossoming in graceful arcs from atop the chassis. Some people prefer neat and tidy; to me the more wires I see the further I move into the future.
Besides, who cares about a few dangling wires when the performance is this good? As configured this F131 is easily the most powerful PC Iâve had the pleasure of playing with. With a 3DMark 11 score of P13816 and FPS numbers so high I had to extend the charts Iâve been using since we started adding benchmarks to PC reviews
https://lastchance.cc/digital-storms-budget-gaming-pc-doesnt-sacrifice-power-5938973%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Looking at these numbers it might be time for me to procure a monitor that goes higher than 1080p, just to see how far I can push this baby.
And thus we come to the portion of any boutique gaming PC review that causes the comment section to fill with âI could build it cheaperâ. Protipâwe all know you could build it cheaper
The grand total for all this power and pretty is $2,569. Thatâs a large chunk of change, but at the risk of sounding clichĂŠd, you get what you pay for. This is a Super Stock model of the Maingear F131, a designation the company created for buyers that are more concerned with quality than cost. The non-Super Stock version of the F131 starts at $1049. The Super Stock kicks in at $1696. The price difference reflects standard watercooling, faster, lower latency memory, SSD caching for faster hard drive access, faster graphic card options, Redline overclocking and fancy chassis modification options. An F131 would be just fine without any of those thingsâwith them itâs just better.
Like the sports car it shares paint with, the Maingear Super Stock F131 is a machine crafted for consumers that arenât afraid to spend a premium on power and luxury. You probably donât need a system this robust; this gorgeous (pink and yellow for life!), but it would sure be nice to have one, wouldnât it?
The F131 is available now at Maingear.com