You might not have heard of Taiwanese PC cooling specialists Cryorig before, but the company has made something of splash with its upcoming Mac Pro-inspired PC case the Ola, and its furniture-inspired case Taku.

Due to be shown at this year's Computex—the mecca for mental PC cases—the Ola is a cylindrical case made of brushed aluminium or wood veneer that has space for a full mini-ITX system, complete with a full-length graphics card such as an Nvidia GTX 1080. Like the Mac Pro, the Ola is designed to exhaust air out of the top of the case via an included 140mm fan.

Each component—CPU, PSU, and GPU—will have its own compartment within the case too, which should go some way towards keeping things cool given the confined space. Indeed, with the CPU cooler height restricted to 82mm, the Ola isn't exactly an overclocker's dream, while the SFX PSU requirement limits power delivery to a maximum of 600W.

Still, at just 226mm wide, 378.5mm tall, and 205mm deep, that the Ola has space for a full size graphics card (as well as two 2.5-inch SSDs and a 3.5-inch drive) is impressive, and if it's quiet enough in use, would make for an excellent living room PC. There's not exactly much competition in the space either, with only MSI's Vortex sporting a similar design, albeit in an expensive pre-built system.













The big gotcha with the Ola is that there's currently no price, and it's not due for release until next year. Cryorig is promising to reveal more details at Computex, though, and its current products are quite reasonably priced.

Meanwhile, the Taku is a mini-ITX PC case that doubles up as a stylish monitor stand, complete with wooden legs and an aluminium finish. It's a little more restrictive than the Ola with support for only 250mm graphics cards and 47mm CPU coolers, but it does sport a a neat pull-out tray design for accessing components, as well as a slot for hooking up charging cables for phones.

There's no price on the Taku yet either, but it should hit the market a bit earlier than the Ola, potentially before the end of 2016.