This is an excellent case that should accommodate just about any motherboard. I've currently got an mATX board in mine, but since I planned on moving away from smaller form factors I decided to go ahead and get a larger case. I formerly used the Silverstone TJ08B-EW for my build, and it was an excellent case, but I much prefer this one for a few reasons:1) There is more power supply room than in my old case. I have a Seasonic Prime TX-750, which is 170mm deep. ATX PSU spec has a fixed height (86mm) and width (150mm), but depth can vary anywhere from 140mm to more than 180mm. In my old TJ08B, the deeper PSU got very close to the back of my optical drive, creating quite the challenge in routing the cables. That's no longer an issue in this case as there's a lot more room. It's also easier to access the PSU in this case.2) I love the front intake design. The two 180mm fans can move a ton of air, and the door design is deep enough that air can be pulled through the side vents without much restriction. I like that I can close the door and hide the fans and dust build-up until I'm ready to clean it. Dust built up pretty fast on my TJ08B and it was immediately noticeable. Not saying you should leave a bunch of dust for long periods of time, but I also have no desire to dust my case daily. Once every 2-4 weeks is good for me.3) Given the location where I put my PC, I prefer a right side window, and the inverted board mount design of this case works out well. The TJ08B also worked for this purpose, but this being a bigger case I get a bigger window and can see more.4) I still like having 5.25" bays for my optical and my hot swap. This case is one of the few that has both 5.25" bays and multiple large intake fans in the front. It also includes higher quality fans than the TJ08B did as the AP182 fans have a MTBF of 50,000 hours (~5.7 years continuous) whereas the AP181 is only 15,000 hours (~1.7 years continuous, and my AP181 did die in that time).So what are the negatives? Here are the few that I've noticed and solutions I've found to compensate:1) In my experience, 2.5" SSD mounts are kind of an afterthought with Silverstone in general. This case is no exception. The mounts for 2.5" drives are at the bottom of the case, and getting at screws on the bottom of a case is not really that fun. For now, I have a 2.5" SSD installed that way, but I'm going to order more Icy Dock 2.5" to 3.5" converters (part number MB882SP-1S-2B). These put the sata and power connections in the same place as a 3.5" drive so that you can use them with hot swaps, and also with the 3.5" drive mounts the FT04 comes with. I recommend the Icy Dock adapters if you want to save yourself some headaches.2) The AP182 fans are good quality fans, but I would have much preferred if this case came with the AP183's. The AP182 have an old school 3 pin design and make use of a manual fan controller. And you really do need this manual fan controller because at 1.3A each, these fans are not safe to connect to most motherboard fan headers. Silverstone's AP183 is a 4 pin PWM fan with a 0.3A draw and 70,000 hour MBTF, and is a much better solution IMHO. The 182 can technically move more air: 2000rpm and higher static pressure compared to the 183's 1500rpm max. But believe me when I say the 183's move plenty of air. The only reason I can think the 182 might be a better choice is due to the higher static pressure helping compensate for the closed front design and air being pulled through the side vents. But I seriously doubt it matters. That said, the 182's are good fans and I plan on keeping them in the case unless there's a problem as it would cost $70-$80 to replace them with 183's.3) The three included magnets are pretty weak. I could barely feel any pull, and the door would just flop open. The magnets measure about 3/4" x 1/4" x 3/32" thick, and unfortunately I couldn't find a precise match in thickness for a replacement, but I did find something close. The BC42 magnets from K&J Magnetics measure 3/4" x 1/4" x 1/8" thick, so they're the correct height and width, but a little thicker. It takes some convincing, but they will fit. I used the point of my 7" needle noose pliers to push them into place, and now I can actually feel a hold on the door when I close it. I'd definitely recommend this upgrade if the door gets on your nerves.Overall this is an excellent case, and I don't think you can go wrong with it. It looks great, cools great, and can fit just about anything. I hope to keep it through many more builds.This is the first computer I've decided to build all by myself, over the years I've seen many cases and worked on hardware with them but I have never opened a case from the original box and put a build together from scratch.This has got to be the best looking case I've ever seen. The sides are steel and front is aluminum. It feels sturdy throughout. It may be prone to scratches but if you take care of it, it should be fine. On the left side is a window, it's nice but I wish it wasn't so low as it reveals cables. With a ATX board I don't know of a way to avoid having the cables being hidden with this case but I did my best it doesn't look bad at all.The actual build, it was easy to get the sides off, all you have to do is take off the plastic top cover, (which contrary to others I think it's pretty solid) then there is a lever you pull and just pull the panel up. It's pretty tight in there but I like that it makes the build feel like a game. It was my first build so I don't know how hard installing a board is compared to other cases but I had to add 3 extra mounting points and put the screws in a specific order. The screw by the PSU first, then the screw by the I/O panel second then the rest however. It was difficult because I didn't have a magnetic screwdriver. All the fan cables and such are a perfect length and come with ties to keep it neat.The most difficult part was mounting the SSD's to the other side. There's two little clip things that you can slide one side of the drive in to hold it, then you put 2 screws in the other side. It was so difficult to fit my tiny screwdriver in those tight spaces, it's possible but it's hard no matter how experienced you could be. Once I got it in the SATA cables fit nicely back there along with other cables i routed back there.It has 4 slots for 2 dual channel RAM.The rotated Board design is amazing and works great with those huge fans, by the way those fans take 3 pin connectors, my board only had one 3 pin thing so I think I can only control one of the fan speeds unless somone makes An adapter.But all in all the case is great build quality all the way through, it's a little tight but in the end it'll make you happier, cause any larger would make it difficult to carry and very heavy as they're using solid sheets of steel.As you can see in pictures it has noise dampening foam, and im not all the way done with my build i still need to add processor and psu. I will come back later to update this review with DSLR pics and with a GPU in there too.Update 4/2/15: After playing with my computer I come back to update my feelings about this case. I learned a lot building a computer and when it was time for me to put my GPU in that I just bought I had to start learning a lot. First I want to say that the case is still in excellent condition and this case keeps the system cooled very well.When I first got my GPU I didn't have the right screwdriver to install it correctly. In fact I never had the right screw driver to build the system in the first place, I used a mini screw driver that worked great for tight areas and small screws but wasn't magnetic and couldn't get enough torque on bigger screws. I had to goto the local drug store to pick up the right screw driver. Once I got that I've put this case to its real strength. I took out everything except the mounted SSD's and PSU. The first time my cable management was terrible and probably blocked a lot of air flow. You must manage the cables before you install your motherboard and it may seem complex to new builders where to route each cable. So I suggest building your system outside of the case first to understand how the 90* rotated motherboard design works. Silverstone really does an excellent job there's just enough room in this case to have everything fit and when you do it right it looks amazing and very neat.To install a GPU you must first goto the top of the case and remove the cover for the pcie slot screws. Take the screws necessary off and then install your GPU or perhaps USB adapter or anything that goes in a pci slot. Its pretty basic but the main thing for new builders is to note that the cover on the top of the case has to be removed to install pci devices.The only thing that I haven't done with this case yet that I want to do is install a slot load drive. I'm sure it would fit in easily and work just fine. I recommend the panasonic version based on reviews I read its just as good as the silverstone version infact maybe even better and for the price of the silverstone DVD RW drive you can get the Panasonic Blue Ray RW drive.Back to the GPU I installed a Nvidia GTX 970. I used the reference Nvidia model because I figured it could really take advantage of the 90* rotated design. With the reference cooler on the 900 series it's bigger than the 700 series and quieter. In this case it releases heat out the top of the case. In a normal case it would release it out the back of the case. Since heat rises and the two silverstone fans are blowing straight up out of the case I figured installing a reference card would be great to keep the air flow vertical. The reference card also looks way better and is quite slim. You could easily do an SLI config in this case.All in all this case is pretty small compared to other cases i've seen and you can fit some performance in this case while it still looks beautiful. Make sure you get that cable management right. The only cons I can give this case is it is very hard for new builders, however if you put your mind to it you can make it work. And I just noticed the model I got on the window there is a long but faint vertical scratch, I don't think it was from me or shipping because this scratch is perfectly straight. I only noticed it when my graphics cards' LED lit up against the window. It's not a deep scratch at all I can't feel it I can only see it. I tried wiping it down thinking maybe it was adhesive but I don't think it is. I might get a new window in the future or maybe even tint the one I have for a really cool looking case.best case I ever own it's big , have hot swap drive and you cable management are easy everything look neat and the case look solid and high quality ill keep this one for year to comeBest case I ever build in. I recommend water cooling like Corsair H60. Design and quality 10/10.