ASUS’ new ROG G1000 is one of those rare CES machines that makes you stop mid–mid-show-floor stride and just stare. Not because it’s another spec monster with a 5090 and a top-end Ryzen chip, but because the entire case seems to be quietly flexing in mid‑air, wrapped in moving holograms that look more at home in a sci‑fi trailer than in a desktop tower.
At a glance, the G1000 is exactly what you’d expect from a no‑compromise ROG flagship in 2026: up to an AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D, paired with either NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 5090 or AMD’s Radeon RX 9070 XT, backed by DDR5‑6000 memory and PCIe 4.0 storage. It’s the sort of configuration that doesn’t just run current AAA titles at high refresh 4K; it is obviously built for a multi‑monitor, VR‑ready, streamer‑plus‑video‑editor workload where gaming is only half the story. The PSU is a 1000W 80 Plus Gold unit, and the chassis has room for up to 4TB of SSD across four M.2 slots, which is the kind of spec sheet that quietly assumes you have a monstrous Steam, Epic, and Game Pass backlog to feed.
But what sets the G1000 apart has almost nothing to do with frame rates and everything to do with how it looks doing the job. ASUS calls the visual trickery “AniMe Holo,” and it’s essentially a trio of holographic fan modules mounted behind the tempered glass side and front panels. Instead of static RGB strips or simple fan halos, these are full‑color, high‑density LED arrays spinning fast enough to create high‑resolution, floating imagery: logos, text, even short animations that appear to hover within the glass. The side panel uses a 380 mm fan with 680 LEDs, while the front panel hides two 215 mm fans with 384 LEDs each, giving the system three independently addressable holographic “screens” that can each run different visuals.
In practice, that means the G1000 doesn’t just glow—it performs. Demo units at CES were showing a mix of ROG branding, pulsing geometric patterns, and playful objects like floating soda cans and game controllers, all seemingly suspended just off the glass as the blades spun in tight, invisible arcs. Stand a little off‑axis and the illusion gets better, not worse; you get that subtle parallax shift that reminds you you’re not looking at a flat panel, but a volumetric effect created by motion and light. It’s not a hologram in the sci‑fi “beam it into the room” sense, but as a case window effect, it pushes desktop aesthetics beyond what standard RGB or even dot‑matrix panels have been doing for the past few years.
If you’ve followed ROG hardware, AniMe Holo feels like the spiritual successor to the AniMe Matrix displays that used to sit on Zephyrus laptop lids, only bigger and far more ambitious. Where AniMe Matrix gave you monochrome dot‑art and scrolling text, AniMe Holo is full‑color, 16.77‑million‑color imagery with support for user‑uploaded content, including MP4 videos and GIFs, all managed through Armoury Crate. There’s even a dedicated “AniMe Holo” button on the top of the case, letting you quickly toggle or change modes without digging into software, which says a lot about how central this feature is to the whole identity of the G1000. For ASUS, this isn’t an optional light strip—it’s the face of the product.
Interestingly, ASUS didn’t sacrifice thermals to pull off that party trick. The G1000 is an unapologetically huge, roughly 104‑liter full tower with a tri‑zone airflow design that physically separates the GPU, PSU, and CPU cooling paths. The most eyebrow‑raising bit of engineering is the so‑called ROG Thermal Atrium: a dedicated chamber for a 420 mm AIO liquid cooler that sits apart from the rest of the case, feeding the CPU with intake air that ASUS says can be up to 10 degrees cooler than the interior. Pair that with three 140 mm intake fans on the radiator and you get a setup clearly designed to keep a hot‑running 9950X3D happy under sustained heavy loads, whether that’s extended 4K gaming or multi‑hour encoding sessions.
The AniMe Holo fans themselves are sealed in their own housings, and ASUS claims noise levels as low as 20.5dBA when they’re running holographic animations. That’s an important detail, because high‑speed spinners plus lots of LEDs could easily have turned into a screaming, buzzing mess. Instead, early hands‑on impressions from the show floor describe the system as more visually outrageous than audibly aggressive, which is exactly what you want when your desktop is meant to be both a performance machine and a showpiece.
From a usability standpoint, the rest of the package is fairly sensible for a halo ROG tower. Front I/O includes a USB‑C 3.2 Gen 2 port, dual USB‑A 3.2 Gen 1 ports, and separate headphone and mic jacks, while the rear I/O scales up to dual USB4 Type‑C, multiple USB‑A ports, HDMI, 2.5 Gb Ethernet, and the usual audio jacks. Wi‑Fi 7 is baked in, so you’re not hunting for dongles or add‑in cards just to get high‑speed wireless into a crowded apartment or dorm setup. It all sits inside a tempered‑glass‑heavy frame measuring roughly 290 x 583 x 615 mm and weighing in around 40 kg depending on configuration, which means you probably won’t want to move it often—but also that it dominates a room in a way a mid‑tower never could.
What’s interesting about the G1000 is how clearly it’s aimed at a certain type of PC buyer. This isn’t the carefully optimized, understated “sleeper” build that disappears under a desk; it’s a centerpiece tower for people who treat their PC as furniture and art as much as hardware. You can imagine it sitting on a low shelf beside an ultrawide OLED monitor, holograms pulsing in sync with a stream overlay, or quietly looping an ambient animation while music plays in the background. ASUS is leaning into that by tightly integrating AniMe Holo with its software stack, so you can, in theory, tie system stats, notifications, or media playback to what’s being projected on the case.
At the same time, the G1000 reopens an old conversation: how much of a gaming PC’s value should be aesthetic versus raw performance? On paper, you could assemble something similar yourself with a 5090, a high‑end X870 board, and a big AIO cooler, and you’d almost certainly spend less than whatever premium ASUS eventually attaches to this prebuilt. DIY also gives you finer control over noise tuning, component brand choices, and upgrade paths. But what it doesn’t give you—at least not without serious modding—is a factory‑finished holographic case with software support and a warranty behind the whole package. For a growing slice of PC buyers, especially creators and streamers, that “instant spectacle” factor is becoming part of the value equation.
ASUS isn’t talking detailed pricing yet, only saying that the ROG G1000 will arrive in early 2026, with actual cost varying by region and configuration. Given the specs and scale, it’s safe to expect it to land at the very top of the prebuilt gaming stack, closer to boutique builder territory than mainstream big‑box PCs. The upside: even at base tiers, you’re not really compromising on core performance; this is not a “pretty but underpowered” machine, but a full‑fat flagship that happens to also be a holographic billboard.
In a CES year where many gaming desktops felt like minor refreshes—new CPUs here, a memory bump there—the ROG G1000 stands out by trying something genuinely different with how a PC looks and feels in a room. Whether AniMe Holo becomes a new category of case bling or a one‑off experiment, it taps into the reality that high‑end rigs are no longer just tools; they’re props in the story people tell about how they play, work, and live with technology. If that story happens to be written in bright, floating holograms across the side of a 40‑kilogram glass tower, ASUS is clearly more than happy to provide the canvas.
Discover more from GadgetBond
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.





