What Is a PC Case with a Display?
A PC case with a display is a computer chassis that integrates an LCD or similar screen directly into its body, allowing users to monitor system stats, play games, or use a full-fledged primary monitor without relying on an external screen, which turns the case itself into both a hardware enclosure and visual interface. For gamers, this new category of integrated monitor case blurs the line between desktop tower and display, creating the foundation for compact, all-in-one PC case designs. Instead of treating the gaming PC case screen as a decorative extra, brands like InWin and Gigabyte are building panels large and capable enough to become part of everyday use. That shift has big implications for cable clutter, portability, and how players think about their main gaming setup, especially for LAN events and small desks.

InWin GX-285: An Interactive Chassis with Games on Board
InWin’s GX-285 is the playful side of this trend, turning a PC case with display into something closer to a mini arcade cabinet. The front panel houses a 10.1‑inch landscape LCD framed by thick black bezels, evoking a small CRT screen, and it includes built-in audio. Large grey face buttons and an IR controller give the chassis a handheld-style feel while you play the bundled arcade-style games, including a tranquil virtual aquarium. Club386 notes that system information such as temperature and time can appear inside these games, folding monitoring into the fun. While the current implementation focuses on cute, self-contained titles, the panel hints at the practical potential of a gaming PC case screen as a secondary display for stats, media, or chat. Behind the novelty, the GX-285 still fits ATX motherboards, long GPUs, and generous radiator options, so the entertainment doesn’t come at the expense of serious hardware.

Aorus C510 Glass Infinity: Turning the Case into the Main Monitor
Gigabyte’s Aorus C510 Glass Infinity aims squarely at the all-in-one PC case concept, building a serious gaming panel into a compact micro ATX shell. Its 16‑inch screen runs at 1080p with a 165Hz refresh rate, which makes it far more than a simple status display and fully capable as a primary gaming monitor on par with many laptops. According to Club386, “the case’s screen features surprisingly high-end specs, with a 1080p resolution and 165Hz refresh rate.” The display can mount on either side of the chassis, while modular feet let users stand the system horizontally or vertically; those feet even double as a carry handle to improve portability. Inside the 25L body, there’s room for back-connect motherboards, standard ATX PSUs, 240mm radiators, and a GeForce RTX 5090, proving that an integrated monitor case does not need to compromise on performance parts.

Less Clutter, More Portability: Why Built-In Screens Appeal to Gamers
For many players, the appeal of a PC case with display is as practical as it is flashy. A gaming tower that doubles as its own monitor cuts down on separate equipment, turning a typical dual-box setup into one compact unit. At LAN parties, hauling a single integrated monitor case instead of a tower and a full-size screen is a clear win, especially when features like the Aorus C510 Glass Infinity’s carry-handle feet come into play. Fewer HDMI and power cables also mean cleaner desks and more flexible layouts in tight spaces. The InWin GX-285’s front LCD shows how a gaming PC case screen can double as both status panel and entertainment surface, while Gigabyte proves that built-in displays can be fast enough for competitive play. Together they suggest a future where convenience-focused gamers treat the tower itself as an all-in-one PC case, not a box that always needs a separate screen.

Where PC Case Screens Go Next
The first wave of display-equipped cases shows two directions: playful, widget-like panels for monitoring and mini-games, and full primary displays that transform the chassis into a quasi-laptop form factor on a desk. Both push the idea that a gaming PC case screen should be more than cosmetic. Expect future designs to add brighter panels, touch input, and deeper integration with system monitoring tools so temperatures, fan curves, and RGB profiles live on the case itself. As more brands experiment, the integrated monitor case could become a standard option alongside tempered-glass and airflow-focused towers. For gamers who value tidy setups, portability, and novel form factors, these all-in-one PC case concepts mark a meaningful evolution. Your next upgrade might not be another external monitor, but a chassis that brings the display directly to the front of your rig.





