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If you flick through any checklist of prebuilt gaming PCs on the market, you will discover that they sometimes all look very a lot alike. That’s as a result of distributors use primary objects for instances and followers to chop prices wherever attainable. But what occurs when a PC producer would not skimp on the goodies and goes all out to impress? Well, you get one thing like the brand new Asus ROG G1000: a hulking monster of a rig with three holographic followers.
Asus calls the setup AniMe Holo, claiming that it is the “world’s first holographic fan system in a prebuilt gaming PC”. The G1000 boasts one 380 mm fan with 720 LEDs and two 215 mm followers with 404 lights.
These do not blast air across the PC; as an alternative, they spin up to a degree the place you visually cannot see the blades in movement and by way of a button on the highest panel (or by means of Asus’ Armoury Crate software program), alerts are despatched to the lights to create patterns, animations, and so forth earlier than your eyes.
I’m doing a poor job of describing it, so watch Asus’ video above to get the complete image (when you pardon the pun). Whether it seems as crisp as that in actual life is anybody’s guess, however the common consensus within the PC Gamer HW workplace is that it seems kinda neat.
Of course, having such massive quad-bladed followers whizzing round, you may count on there to be numerous noise or vibrations. But Asus reckons it has the issue sorted by housing them in self-contained and remoted panels. Mind you, that hinged aspect panel seems significantly thick, so that you’re most likely questioning simply how massive the ROG G1000 is.
It stands almost 62 cm tall, a fraction over 58 cm long, and 29 cm wide. That’s 10 cm taller and 8 cm longer than a Fractal Design North XL, so this is one seriously bulky gaming PC. The G1000 has those dimensions not just for the holographic fans, but also because it comes with a 420 mm AIO liquid cooler in a ‘ROG Thermal Atrium’—basically a separate chamber at the top, with side ventilation for airflow.
I’m not convinced that the design is going to win any awards for efficient fluid dynamics, because the front holo panel is solid, so the air ingress points for the whole PC are on the sides (with one small one underneath). This is important because of what’s inside the ROG G1000: AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D, ROG Astral GeForce RTX 5090, 64 GB DDR5, and a 2 TB SSD.
Admittedly, that’s for the GM1000TY-XS999 variant, and Asus says the G1000 will be available with ROG Astral RTX 5080, ROG Strix RTX 5070 Ti, and Radeon RX 9070 XT options (no mention about CPU choices). But even so, whatever configuration you go with, there’s going to be a decent amount of heat generated by the components that will need to be shifted.

That could mean that the ROG G1000 is a bit of a noisy beast when being worked hard, especially the RTX 5090 variant, but at least you’ll be able to distract yourself from it all by having some funky animations going on via the holo fans.
Asus hasn’t given us any indication of prices yet, though it’s obvious that the top-tier variant is going to be many, many thousands of dollars. However, I reckon within a few months, we’ll start to see new PC cases sporting holo fans, so if that’s the only thing you’re interested in with the ROG G1000, then you’ll probably be able to get your hands on something by the summer.
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