InWin celebrates 40th anniversary with unique PC cases, including one shaped like a trophy

InWin is marking its 40th anniversary at Computex 2025 with a slew of new PC cases, including the new Special Edition ChronoMancy chassis, which is shaped to look like a trophy.
The ChronoMancy is a rather unique PC chassis, conceived as a trophy to symbolise InWin’s four decades of design. Its top panel, crafted from blue engineering-grade plastic, is etched with the history of InWin’s special edition chassis, celebrating the company’s past. Supported by five pillars representing global presence, the case stands over 1.1 metres tall, commanding attention. A curved aluminium cover gracefully rotates to automatically open, revealing a spacious interior capable of housing up to E-ATX motherboards and various high-end components. Adding to its captivating presence, the ChronoMancy features a synchronised light and music display, controlled by a specially designed wand-shaped controller.
Besides the Chronomancy, InWin also unveiled a diverse range of new PC chassis at Computex. Starting with the Wiew, this chassis blends elegance and performance with its panoramic glass views and enhanced ventilation for clear hardware visibility. Then, there’s the Covalent super tower workstation, which stands as InWin’s flagship super tower, engineered explicitly for EEB motherboards and multi-GPU systems. It’s built to meet the rigorous demands of AI development, deep learning, and high-performance computing (HPC), offering extensive support for fans and liquid cooling radiators.
Moving on to the Shift open frame platform, which features an all-aluminium open frame architecture with adjustable cooling support, it is ideal for extreme overclocking and showcasing hardware. There’s also the Tactix chassis, positioned for ultra-high-end gaming or workstation projects, featuring a dual-chamber design and support for two PSUs, perfect for complex GPU configurations.
The Prism white edition ATX chassis, echoing InWin’s iconic Tou series, delivers a clean, transparent aesthetic with practical functionality for everyday builds and hardware showcasing. Lastly, we have the Dlite, a streamlined ATX chassis that inherits distinctive Dubili design elements, such as aluminium accents and a unified structure, optimising assembly and panel arrangement for improved usability and visual consistency.
KitGuru says: Interested in any of In Win’s new PC cases? Which one looks the most visually appealing to you?