Many PC and chassis makers these days are trying to address console gamers with computers that are as small as game consoles and fit into the living room design-wise, but which are considerably more powerful and can run games at ultra-high resolutions. When Corsair announced its plans to enter this market with its Bulldog concept a year ago, it was not exactly a big surprise: a company with expertise in cooling and PC chassis is arguably the best possible candidate to offer such kind of products. Even though some chassis designs seem to churn out over weeks, Corsair has taken over a year and a half to bring the final product to the market.

This week, Corsair finally started to sell the Bulldog chassis and barebones in North America and Australia. Corsair equips its Bulldog case with its H5 SF low-profile liquid cooler, which was specifically designed for mini-ITX systems and which performance is sufficient for all mainstream CPUs from Intel and AMD, its SF600 SFX PSU as well as two fans. The Bulldog case can house a mini-ITX motherboard, a full-height graphics card (which is not longer than 300 mm and is not thicker than 90 mm), a 3.5” HDD, up to three 2.5” storage devices, multiple fans as well as an SFX power supply. The price of the Bulldog chassis (CS-9000003-NA) is $299, just like Corsair promised a year ago.

The internal architecture of the Corsair Bulldog allows installing modern high-performance graphics cards, such as NVIDIA’s reference GeForce GTX 1080 with blowers. However, due to thermal constraints, Corsair recommends using its own H55 liquid cooling system with the HG10 bracket to cool-down GPUs, or install the AMD Radeon R9 Fury X or graphics cards with pre-equipped hybrid cooling. 

Corsair also offers the Bulldog DIY PC barebone with pre-installed GIGABYTE GA-Z170N-WIFI motherboard. The GA-Z170N-WIFI supports all modern Intel Skylake-S processors in LGA1151 packaging (as well as, we assume, the next Intel generation of Kaby Lake processors), up to 32 GB of DDR4 memory, an M.2 slot for high-performance SSDs, a PCIe x16 slot for graphics cards, two Gigabit Ethernet ports, 2T2R 802.11ac Wi-Fi, integrated multi-channel audio, USB 3.0 (with Type-A and Type-C connectors) ports and so on. The Bulldog barebone kit (CS-9000001-NA) is priced at $399, in line with Corsair’s original promises. In addition, select PC makers  and system integrators will offer pre-configured systems featuring Corsair’s Bulldog chassis, which will cost according to their specifications.

Corsair Bulldog: Quick Specs
Dimensions (W×H×D) 457 mm × 133 mm × 381 mm
Weight 5 kilograms
Motherboard Form-Factor Mini-ITX
PSU Form-Factor SFX
3.5" Drive Bays 1
2.5" Drive Bays 1 if 3.5" drive is installed
3 if 3.5" bay is unused
System Fans 2 × 92 mm (included)
1 × 120 mm
CPU Cooler Dimensions Up to 90 mm in height
Graphics Card Length 300 mm
PSU Length 130 mm
External Connectors Power, Audio, USB 3.0, Display, etc

From an aesthetics point of view, Corsair has altered the design of its Bulldog compared to the prototype. Among some other things, it eliminated red inlays to make it look less aggressive in order to blend in with home theater surroundings. The chassis has retained its futuristic look as well as the ventilation capabilities, but now it matches various players and other equipment in terms of color scheme.

Even though Corsair’s Bulldog has hit the market somewhat later than expected, it still looks very promising thanks to the emergence of new 14nm and 16nm video cards this quarter that can better handle games in 4K resolution than previous-gen graphics adapters.

(Edit from Ian: I should also add a nod to Dustin Sklavos, former AnandTech editor for cases and cooling, who is the Corsair Product Manager for Bulldog and had a big hand in its design and development.)

Source: Corsair

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  • Daniel Egger - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    What?!? This thing is so fugly, I'd never put that on the lowboard... Also funny how the article mentions the blending with other home theater surroundings, yet the images do not show any of it. Seriously guys: Put a toaster on the lowboard and hide that thing next to the receiver and bluray player *inside* the lowboard; looks much better but retains the WTF look of visitors plus you can make a quick snack while using that equipment without losing visuals.
  • ddriver - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    that's why it is called bulldog - cuz it is fugly
  • Chapbass - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    Whats a lowboard? What country do you live in?
  • Daniel Egger - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    A lowboard is a piece of furniture (like a cabinet or a shelf) with rather short height you place underneath the TV set, just like shown in the image.
  • Samus - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    Chapbass clearly has never been to IKEA but who can fault him ;)
  • at80eighty - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    I'm glad they got rid of the inlays. This just became a serious contender for my next pc
  • FreihEitner - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    That mini-ITX system looks like it's about the size of my original 1980s PC-XT clone. That's huge for mini-ITX!
  • Samus - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    I was thinking the same thing. Considering there is an SFX PSU in there I can't believe it doesn't fit an mATX board!
  • schizoide - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    $399 for a low-profile case, integrated CPU cooler, PSU, and motherboard is actually fairly reasonable. Figure they're charging around $150 for the case alone which isn't cheap but not at all extortion.

    Thing is, it's actually quite large-- it's 18 inches wide. I had an old NSK2480 desktop case used as a HTPC many years ago that was NOT small and it was 17.5" wide! It's likely going to be larger than your high-end receiver. That will fit in a home theater cabinet, but just barely.
  • schizoide - Friday, May 27, 2016 - link

    What I _really_ want is something like that skull canyon NUC with a double-height PCI-e riser slot stacked on top of it to hold an 11" videocard. That would be suhhh-weet.

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