
A creator has built a 99kg steampunk water-cooled PC that looks more like a museum piece than a standard gaming rig.





The project combines heavy metal framing, decorative industrial detailing, and a custom cooling layout designed for both thermal stability and visual impact.

Build quality appears impressive, but this is clearly an enthusiast showcase rather than a practical daily setup for most users.

The “Radiator Unit” Is Basically the Entire Water-Cooling System

For SEA PC communities, this is the kind of case mod that will spark copycat projects at LAN events and creator meetups.
It also highlights a broader trend: custom PC culture is shifting from ‘RGB only’ toward identity-driven designs with narrative themes.
The weight alone makes transport a real challenge, which means long-term maintenance planning is as important as aesthetics.
18-Liter Cooling Loop Nearly Turned Into a Disaster

Still, the execution proves that functional cooling and artistic presentation don’t have to be mutually exclusive.
If you value personality over portability, this build is exactly the kind of overkill that makes the hobby fun.
It Worked in the End, But the Build Process Was Brutal
Performance numbers are secondary here—the point is craftsmanship, uniqueness, and presence.
And on that front, this project absolutely succeeds.
A 99kg Steampunk Gaming PC, Built the Hard Way
Whether this starts a trend or stays a one-off, it’s one of the most memorable custom rigs we’ve seen this year.
In short: impractical for most, unforgettable for everyone.