What Makes the Air Power G10 Different?
The Air Power G10 case is a mid-tower PC chassis that uses independently tilting front intake fans to let builders direct airflow precisely toward key components instead of relying on fixed, front-facing fan layouts. Formula V Line’s design answers a longstanding limitation in PC case airflow design, where front intake fans sit flat behind a panel and blow air in a straight line regardless of hardware placement. By mounting each of the three front fans on its own tilting bracket, the Air Power G10 gives users a way to shape air paths toward the GPU, CPU socket area, or storage zones to match their build. This approach turns airflow into a tunable parameter rather than a fixed constraint, aimed at both performance-focused enthusiasts and builders who enjoy fine-tuning thermals.

How Front-Tilting Intake Fans Reshape Airflow
Traditional mid-tower case cooling relies on flat, front-mounted intake fans that send a broad column of air through the chassis, hoping that enough reaches the hottest parts before dissipating. The Air Power G10 case disrupts this by placing three intake fans on independent tilting brackets, each with its own nylon dust filter and quick-release mount. According to Formula V Line, “its three front intake fans each sit on an independent tilting bracket, so builders can angle each fan to aim airflow toward the GPU, toward the CPU socket area, or anywhere in between.” This lets users build focused airflow channels: one fan can feed the graphics card, another the CPU cooler, while the third supports general intake. The result is a more deliberate PC case airflow design, where air is aimed instead of sprayed.

Dynamic Air Intake Patterns for Different Builds
The Air Power G10’s tilting intake fans are meant to adapt to different hardware layouts rather than force a single airflow pattern on every system. High-end GPUs that sit low in the case can receive a direct intake stream by tilting the bottom fan downward, while the top fan can pivot toward the CPU socket to feed an air cooler or VRM heatsinks. Builders using tall tower coolers or top-mounted radiators can angle all three fans upward to drive air toward the upper portion of the case, creating a consistent path from front to top. Each bracket’s quick-release design makes it easy to swap fans or clean the nylon filters without dismantling the whole front panel. This flexibility means one case can serve quiet, low-power builds and heat-heavy gaming rigs with equal control over airflow.

Bottom Chamber Modularity and Radiator-Friendly Layout
Beyond the tilting intake fans, the Air Power G10 extends its airflow-focused design to the bottom and top of the chassis. The bottom chamber module can be repositioned forward or backward, changing how air moves from lower fans into the main chamber and giving more freedom in how power supplies and drives are arranged. This allows builders to tune pressure zones and component spacing to reduce heat pockets near the GPU or PSU. The case also includes bottom-mounted fans that work with the front intakes to create a multi-layered intake path when needed. On top, a tool-free removable panel makes mounting radiators or additional exhaust fans simpler, reducing the friction of adding liquid cooling. Together, these features support a coherent airflow strategy: adjustable intakes, modular bottom layout, and an easy path for warm air to exit through the roof.

Debuting at Computex and Pointing to Future Cooling Ideas
Formula V Line plans to present the Air Power G10 as its headline mid-tower case at Computex 2026, where it leads a larger lineup of 22 new products that includes other cases, air coolers, cooling fans, power supplies, and gaming chairs. The company describes the chassis as a rethink of front intake, emphasizing the move away from static fan placement toward dynamic, builder-defined airflow. The Air Power G10 will be previewed at the event before its planned launch in North America in September, with full specifications and clearances shared at the booth. Reviewers and enthusiasts are watching to see how much thermal benefit focused airflow can offer compared with the glass-heavy, aesthetics-first designs that dominate today. Early commentary has even speculated about future versions with motorized, potentially AI-controlled tilted fans that could react to temperature profiles in real time.

