Be Quiet! has introduced its new flagship PC chassis, which combines the company’s expertise in building quiet PC components with extensive modularity and customization features. The be quiet! Dark Base 900-series PC cases will feature aluminum finish, whereas the Pro version will also come with LED strips as well as Qi wireless charger for mobile devices.

The new be quiet! Dark Base 900 and Dark Base 900 Pro chassis feature a modular design, which allows switching sides of the motherboard tray, adjusting its height, removing redundant HDD and ODD cages and, of course, installing any types of fans and/or liquid cooling. Since be quiet! is primarily known for silent PC equipment, the Dark Base 900 inherit numerous designs ideas from its predecessors, including internal architecture that optimizes airflow; specially designed noise intake systems; noise-cancelling side and front panels; decoupled fan, HDD and motherboards mounts to eliminate any transmission of vibration to the case and so on.

The Dark Base 900 and the Dark Base 900 Pro chassis from be quiet! can be equipped with up to two ODDs and up to seven HDDs. They also come with pre-installed three SilentWings 3 fans (one 120 mm fan and two 140 mm fans) and feature a basic fan control.

be quiet! Dark Base 900 and Dark Base 900 Pro
Motherboard Size ATX, Micro-ATX, Mini-ITX
Drive Bays External 2 × 5.25"
Internal 7 × 3.5" or up to 15 x 2.5" (Drive's cage)
Cooling Front 3 × 140 mm or 3 × 120 mm (2 × 120 mm included)
Rear 1 × 120 mm (included) or 1 × 140 mm
Top 1 × 200 mm or 3 x 140 mm or 3 x 120 mm
HDD/Side 2 × 120 mm
Bottom 2 × 140 mm or 2 × 120 mm
Radiator Support Front Unknown
Rear Up to 140 mm (?)
Top Up to 200 mm (?)
Side -
Bottom -
I/O Port 2× USB 3.0, 2× USB 2.0, 1× Headphone, 1× Mic
Power Supply Size ATX
Dimensions Unknown
Features of the Dark Base Pro · 4 mm tempered glass side panel
· LED strips
· Qi wireless charger for mobile devices
Price Dark Base 900 — $199
Dark Base 900 Pro — $249

Unlike the previous-generation high-end PC cases from be quiet!, the new Dark Base 900-series chassis come with stylish brushed aluminum front and top panels, which feature four USB (two USB 3.0 and two USB 2.0) ports as well as 3.5-mm audio input and output.

To appeal to modders and enthusiasts, the more sophisticated Dark Base 900 Pro chassis will also have a side panel made of 4-mm tempered glass, LED strips with five colors pre-installed as well as a Qi wireless charger for mobile devices. The Dark Base 900 Pro will be one of the world’s first PC cases with Qi charger, a decent addition to those, who are on the bleeding edge of progress and uses either devices with wireless charging, or cases with appropriate capabilities.

Both new cases from be quiet! will hit the market later this year and will be covered with a three-year limited warranty. As for the price, the Dark Base 900 will retail for $199, whereas the more advanced Dark Base 900 Pro will retail for $249.

Source: be quiet!

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  • ltcommanderdata - Thursday, May 26, 2016 - link

    When will we start seeing cases with USB 3.1 Gen 2 ports? Type C ports may be waiting on a new header to be standardized, but isn't the header for Type A unchanged between USB 3.1 Gen 1 and Gen 2?
  • DanNeely - Thursday, May 26, 2016 - link

    AFAIK it's just chicken/egg delays for the ports on chassis. The header should be unchanged; and a 3.1g2 A port is identical to a 3.0 A port; with the only difference being the controller they're plugged into on the mobo.
  • Chaitanya - Thursday, May 26, 2016 - link

    There are quite a few cases on market(CoolerMaster, Inwin, etc) which offer USB Type C port on front panel. Overall industry has been very lethargic about the adoption of the port(almost all electronics manufacturers are giving it a cold shoulder) and this shows in adoption of Type-C in PC makers as well. As of now there are no motherboard manufacturers who have hooked up a 20 pin USB 3.x header to a USB 3.1 controller. Maybe next year when Intel's Skylake successor arrives things might change until then you can get cases with USB Type C on front.
  • basroil - Thursday, May 26, 2016 - link

    Looks nice, but only 7 HDD/SSD in a case that size? I would have expected 8x 3.5 + 2x SSD mounts at least
  • chriskay - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    Actually there are 15x SSD, each HDD mount can take two SSDs, and there is one additional one behind the motherboard.
  • imaheadcase - Thursday, May 26, 2016 - link

    I wish manufactors would make all versions of the case, instead of a all in one deal. Micro-ATX, Mini-ITX only version would be ideal for what these offer.
  • timbotim - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    I empathise.

    I've resorted to designing and building my own cases in the last couple of years. Given that there are compromises involved in the design of each component in a system, by the time you get to the case, there must be so many compromises to make that being a commercial case designer must be close to the ultimate plate-spinning job.

    In a similar vein, I've often wondered why there's no modular I/O facility on motherboards. Just plug in the the I/O you need to a generic board connector (maybe 1 fast, 1 slow) & away you go.
  • Gadgety - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    I like your idea for a generic board connector for I/O on the motheboard.
  • Freakie - Thursday, May 26, 2016 - link

    Having recently got a phone which can do wireless charging, I have to say that the addition of the Qi tech is pretty cool. I used to think that wireless charging wouldn't catch on (seeing as it's been struggling for years) but now with stuff like this, and even cars coming with wireless charging surfaces built-in, I'm glad to see it finally kicking off in non-niche areas.
  • Freakie - Thursday, May 26, 2016 - link

    Though I do wish this case came in a full sized tower instead of mid-sized so that E-ATX boards could fit.

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