Okay, so I was really curious about what, specifically I would get when purchasing this PC. I only found one YT review, so I'd been going off what Skytech installed in that reviewer's PC. My PC was shipped with a Zotac 5090, 9950x3d, 64gb Orion V DDR5 RAM CL42, WD SSD with pretty slow R/W speeds (sub 4k), Gigabyte Gaming Wifi 6 motherboard, 360 mm AIO (unsure of the brand), all fans are 120mm.
Buying the individual components alone would cost more than I paid for the entire assembled PC. I wish Skytech could standardize things so they could list the specific parts being included in each build instead of consumers having to wait and cross their fingers.
So, I bought the white model because it was quite a bit cheaper than the identical black case and I was planning to swap the internals into a different case anyway. If I'd planned on keeping the case it would have been disappointing to see the AIO, mobo, RAM, were black.
When I originally got the PC I could hear a lose screw rattling around in the case. I found it and sat it to the side just in case it was needed. I immediately changed the front fans for 140s and found another lose screw. A few days later my wife found another screw identical to the other two laying next to my desk. They appeared to be case screws and I'm assuming Skytech's assemblers dropped them and were just too lazy/unconcerned to retrieve them. That isn't confidence inspiring.
One of the PCI E slots had a healthy amount of glue dropped into it that I had to dig out.
The Wifi6 mobo was a disappointment. I mean, it's 2026. I've had wifi-7 in my house for 2 years now. The mobo also only had a single Gen 5 SSD slot, which kinda sucked but I think that will remain normal for a few more years.
As for function, everything worked as expected. The CL42 RAM was disappointing but it won't impact my gaming.
If I had to do it over I'd purchase again. But not if I were new to PC builds. The things that I saw and heard would scare away a lot of customers, especially having screws fall out of the case, lol. But, as I said it was cheaper to buy the parts this way than to source them myself, so it worked out.