Skip to main content

Gigabyte’s cableless Project Stealth PC is finally here

First revealed late last year, Gigabyte’s Project Stealth promised to solve the problem of cables once and for all. Now, the project is launching. Gigabyte has partnered with custom PC building company Maingear to sell a custom motherboard, GPU, and case bundle focused on making PC building easier and better looking.

If you’ve ever built a PC, you know how annoying and even physically painful it is to plug all the connectors in. The basic problem is that there’s often very little room inside a PC, even in the largest of chasses. So, what did Gigabyte and Maingear do to solve this decades-old problem? They reversed the direction of all of the connectors. All cables plug into the back of the motherboard and GPU in this build. Zero cables are plugged into the front of the motherboard, leaving everything in the back and hidden from view.

The front of a Project Stealth PC.
GIGABYTE

The Project Stealth bundle comes with a Z690 Aorus Elite Stealth motherboard, an RTX 3070 Gaming OC Stealth, and an Aorus C300G Stealth case. This barebones bundle comes from Gigabyte, and it’s available without the other components. This isn’t a proprietary solution, so you can pair this bundle with normal, off-the-shelf parts (maybe the of the best processors and some of the best RAM).

Recommended Videos

Gigabyte recommends a Core i5 or Core i7 CPU, but you could go all the way to a Core i9-12900KS if you have a good enough cooler.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Outside of the barebones kit, Maingear will sell fully built systems. We don’t know how expensive the prebuilts will be, nor what configuration options are available. They should launch alongside the barebones kit, though.

Although these parts are not technically proprietary, they are probably best used together. The case can probably be reused for a future build, but the GPU’s power connectors could pose compatibility problems for some cases. The motherboard is very unlikely to be compatible with cases not specifically designed for it since all the connectors are on the back, and in most cases, the back of the motherboard is totally covered.

The back of a Gigabyte Project Stealth PC.
GIGABYTE

On the other hand, as long as you keep the case, there’s nothing stopping you from upgrading the GPU or motherboard. That would compromise the cableless aesthetic of Project Stealth, but that’s better than not being able to upgrade at all. And if Project Stealth is successful, perhaps we can expect more Project Stealth compatible boards, GPUs, and cases in the future.

The Project Stealth bundle is expected to arrive in early summer, but Gigabyte hasn’t confirmed a street date yet. The barebones bundle runs $1,200, which is about the same amount you’d spend on an RTX 3070, Z690 board, and a full-sized case. We don’t have word on pricing for the Maingear prebuilt machines yet.

Matthew Connatser
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Matthew Connatser is a freelance writer who works on writing and updating PC guides at Digital Trends. He first got into PCs…
As a PC gamer, 2024 just made me sad
Fingers holding an Intel 285K.

Fine, I'll say it: 2024 wasn't a great year for PC gaming hardware. I'd even go as far as to call it pretty lame. There were plenty of great PC games to enjoy, but when it comes to hardware, it felt like one big letdown.

A lot of my most anticipated launches ended up getting delayed, and most of the upgrades we got were a bit of a wet blanket. Here are all the various things that proved to be a disappointment in 2024, both to me and to many other PC gamers, but why I'm feeling hopeful for 2025.
The least impressive generation of CPUs in a while

Read more
Intel Arc B580 vs. Nvidia RTX 4060: a one-sided showdown
The back of the Intel Arc B580 graphics card.

Intel is back with one of the best graphics cards you can buy -- the Arc B580. As you can read in my Intel Arc B580 review, it's a graphics card that has no business being as powerful as it is given how inexpensive it is. And when comparing it to its main competitor, Nvidia's RTX 4060, Intel mops the floor with its rival.

I've been testing Intel's latest GPU over the last couple of weeks, and I decided to put it head-to-head with Nvidia's budget RTX 4060, which is currently the second-most-popular GPU on Steam. Given the performance I've seen, Intel's GPU deserves to start climbing up the rankings in those same charts.
Specs and pricing

Read more
Reviewers hated this AMD GPU. Here’s why I still recommend it
AMD RX 7800 XT and RX 7700 XT graphics cards.

It's rare that reviewers universally hate a graphics card, but most wouldn't put AMD's RX 7700 XT among the best graphics cards you can buy. As you can read in my own combo review of the RX 7800 XT and RX 7700 XT, the latter GPU just didn't make sense when it launched more than a year ago. Time has marched on, however, and the RX 7700 XT doesn't get the respect it deserves today.

You probably have a negative assumption about this graphics card, and I wouldn't blame you. Tom's Hardware said the GPU got stuck "between a proverbial rock and hard place," while TechSpot was even more harsh: "Purchasing the Radeon 7700 XT at $450 is ill-advised when the 7800 XT is available, leaving us questioning AMD's rationale behind this launch." User reactions were harsher still.

Read more