Fractal Design North Review: 9.2/10 - Where Scandinavian Design Meets Airflow
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Overview
The Fractal Design North is a stunning ATX mid-tower that blends real oak wood slats with a mesh front panel and excellent thermal performance, proving that a PC case can be both a functional cooling enclosure and a piece of furniture. At $139, it occupies a unique position — there’s nothing else on the market quite like it, and it manages to deliver top-tier airflow without sacrificing its striking Nordic aesthetic. Competitors like the NZXT H7 Flow ($129) offer comparable airflow with a more conventional mesh design, while the Lian Li Lancool 216 ($109) provides a more aggressive cooling-focused layout. The North stands apart by prioritizing aesthetics equally with performance.
Design & Build
The North’s defining feature is the front panel: vertical real oak wood slats set into a steel frame, available in two finishes (walnut and lighter oak). The wood is treated with a matte lacquer that resists fingerprints and minor scratches while maintaining the natural grain texture. Behind the wood slats sits a fine mesh dust filter that covers the entire front intake area. The top panel is a steel mesh with a magnetic dust filter, and the left side panel is tempered glass (3mm thick) with a dark tint that obscures cable clutter while showing off components. The steel chassis itself is rigid with no flex — Fractal uses 0.8mm SECC steel throughout with folded edges that prevent sharp corners during installation. The build quality is exceptional for the price, though the glass panel attaches with thumbscrews rather than a tool-less latch system.
Performance
Thermal performance is impressive for a case with such a strong aesthetic focus. With the stock two 140mm Aspect 14 intake fans at the front and no exhaust fan included (you’ll want to add one), CPU temperatures peaked at 68°C on our Ryzen 9 9950X test bench (240mm AIO, Cinebench R23 loop) and GPU temperature hit 72°C on an RTX 5080 FE. Adding a single 120mm or 140mm rear exhaust dropped both by 3-4°C. The mesh side panel option (sold separately for $35) improves GPU thermals by another 2°C by allowing the GPU to pull air from outside the case. The dust filtration is effective — the front mesh catches most particles, and the top magnetic filter is easy to remove for cleaning. Noise levels are reasonable: the open mesh panels mean you’ll hear fan noise more than in a dampened case like the be quiet! Silent Base 802, but the unrestricted airflow lets you run fans at lower RPMs.
Features
The interior layout is straightforward and builder-friendly. The PSU shroud has a removable metal cover that reveals two 3.5-inch drive cages (each holding one drive) and a slide-out fan/radiator bracket behind the front panel that supports up to a 360mm radiator. Cable management behind the motherboard tray offers 22mm of depth with Velcro straps and rubber grommets at all major cutouts. The front I/O includes a USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 (10 Gbps) port, two USB-A 3.0 ports, and a combined 3.5mm audio jack. GPU support is excellent at 355mm clearance, and the CPU cooler clearance of 175mm means nearly every air cooler on the market fits. The North is also available in a mesh side panel version and a tempered glass version.
Pros
- Unique real wood front panel design — nothing else looks like it
- Excellent thermal performance for a case with style
- High build quality with thick steel and no flex
- Great GPU and CPU cooler clearance
Cons
- Only two fans included (no exhaust fan)
- Glass panel uses thumbscrews instead of a latch
- Mesh side panel is a $35 add-on
- Wood slats require occasional dusting to maintain appearance
Verdict
The Fractal Design North is a masterpiece of PC case design that proves you don’t have to choose between aesthetics and performance. It delivers excellent airflow, supports virtually any high-end component, and looks beautiful doing it. The only compromises are minor — two fans instead of three, and the glass panel could use a better mounting system. If you want a PC case that looks like furniture rather than a gaming accessory, the North is the obvious choice.
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