What the Air Power G10 Is and Why Its Airflow Matters
The Air Power G10 is a mid-tower PC case that reimagines traditional PC case airflow by using front-tilting intake fans and a modular internal layout to direct cooling air precisely toward high-heat components like the GPU and CPU, rather than relying on fixed, front-flat fan mounts. While many modern cases emphasize glass panels and RGB lighting, Formula V Line positions the Air Power G10 as a practical answer for builders who care about intake fan cooling efficiency. It is designed for users who want a custom PC case that supports focused airflow paths, cleaner maintenance, and flexible thermal tuning without resorting to exotic mods. By altering how intake air enters and moves through the chassis, the Air Power G10 aims to improve PC case airflow in ways that conventional mid-tower case design rarely addresses.

Front-Tilting Intake Fans: A New Direction for PC Case Airflow
At the center of the Air Power G10’s identity is its three front intake fans, each mounted on an independent tilting bracket instead of sitting flat against the front panel. This lets builders angle airflow directly toward the GPU, the CPU socket, or any zone between them, rather than cooling the case interior in a broad, unfocused sweep. Formula V Line describes this as a break from decades of fixed front-intake layouts, and it turns the front fan section into a targeted cooling tool instead of a simple intake wall. Each bracket includes its own nylon dust filter and a quick-release mechanism, so individual fans can be removed for cleaning or swapped for different models without tearing down the whole front section. For anyone tuning intake fan cooling around a specific graphics card or processor, this opens new ways to experiment with airflow paths.

Modular Bottom Chamber and Top Panel for Tuned Airflow
Beyond the tilting intake fans, the Air Power G10’s internal structure supports more granular control over airflow. The case includes a bottom chamber with fan mounts that can be repositioned forward or backward, allowing builders to bias cooling toward the front GPU area or nearer the power supply and storage zones. By shifting this chamber, users can tune the balance between cool air delivery to expansion cards and general under-motherboard ventilation. The top panel is removable without tools, which simplifies radiator installation for liquid-cooling setups and keeps the build process cleaner. Combined with the front intakes, this layout encourages a more three-dimensional airflow strategy: angled front fans feed targeted zones, bottom-mounted fans deliver additional intake or exhaust as needed, and the open top helps warm air exit efficiently. It is an approach that treats mid-tower case design as an airflow puzzle rather than a fixed template.

Clean Aesthetics, Easy Maintenance, and Custom PC Builds
While its airflow engineering is the headline, the Air Power G10 also tries to stay builder-friendly in day-to-day use. The front intake fan brackets use quick-release hardware, so each fan and its nylon dust filter can be detached individually for cleaning, which helps keep intake paths clear without dismantling the whole front panel. The tool-free top panel supports cleaner cable routing and easier access during upgrades, especially for users adding or replacing liquid-cooling radiators. The overall design leans toward an ultra-clean aesthetic, with the airflow-focused hardware integrated in a way that still suits showcase builds. For custom PC case enthusiasts, this combination of targeted intake fan cooling, modular chambers, and serviceable panels suggests a chassis tailored for people who regularly tweak their layouts and thermal profiles rather than building once and leaving everything static.

Computex Debut and What Comes Next for Formula V Line
Formula V Line is bringing the Air Power G10 to Computex as the lead product in a planned lineup of 22 new releases spanning cases, air coolers, cooling fans, power supplies, and gaming chairs. According to Formula V Line, full specifications, materials, and clearance figures for the Air Power G10 will be shared on the show floor, giving reviewers and builders a closer look at clearances and layout options. The company also plans other cases with panoramic glass and display-equipped fans, but the G10 stands out as the airflow experiment in the range. One press statement highlights that “The Air Power G10 Chassis Rethinks Front Intake,” underscoring how central the tilting intake design is to the concept. As reviewers test it, the real question will be how much these focused airflow paths can lower temperatures compared with more conventional mid-tower case design.

