IntroductionNZXT is not a brand new company anymore, they have gained a lot experience in tweaking and fine tuning their computer chassis these past years and they have evolved from providing only “gamer”-minded cases, to a more broad spectrum of products. We saw early proof of this with the
Lexa and recently with the
Zero, both cases do away with the overly sculpted front panel and take a more traditional approach to the PC case “look”.
Today we test their most classic case yet, the Adamas, it’s without a doubt a high end product with a price tag of €200/$150+. The Adamas is made entirely out of high quality aluminium panels of 2~3mm thickness. It’s a mid-tower sized construction with custom finned top/side and internal drive panels. Looks wise it can stand proudly next to high end products from Lian-Li and Silverstone.
SpecificationsThe Adamas is a mid tower, quite lengthy but not very high. I found it big enough to house a single GPU high end system but when running in SLI you might want to look for a more spacious case.
Enough room for a series of hard drives and 5.25” size devices. The Adamas is smaller than the tower cases I previously tested, see the comparison below (next to my trusty 2L Coke Bottle):
NZXT Adamas
Antec Nine Hunderd Gaming Case
Casetek V.Orpheus
Coolermaster CM Stacker 830 Evolution
Silverstone TJ09
If I use the official dimensions and convert them to pixels, I can create an image like this:
Hopefully this helps to create an idea of how the different cases compare size wise; a similar comparison shot from the side of the cases
you can see here.
Let’s move on ->