I’ve been building PCs as a hobby since the early 2000s, and have been lucky enough to forge a career around it for the last ten years as well. It’s a critical part of my life, and without it, I wouldn’t even have the opportunity to sit here and write for TechRadar today.

It’s radical, really: I remember sitting down and watching copious amounts of Jayztwocents content on liquid cooling back in 2013/2014, and I lusted after those builds. After all, liquid-cooled machines are just incredible things to behold. Since then I’ve built numerous liquid-cooled systems, for both personal use and for publication too.

Getting into the industry in 2015, the first thing on my mind was building my own custom liquid-cooled rig. The time was right: SLI, Crossfire, hot chips that responded well to larger cooling solutions, big massive cases with a huge amount of radiator support, and awesome liquid-cooled water blocks and particle coolant dominated the market. AIOs were commonplace, sure, but the largest ones landed at 280mm at most, and none of them provided the true guts and glory that a custom rig could get you. I even built a few of them here at TechRadar.

This PC was built back in 2017, the liquid-cooling heyday, with SLI Titan cards and liquid-cooled X-series CPUs . (Image credit: Future)

Today though, that landscape has changed massively. It’s changed in ways that back then we just couldn’t predict, and with EKWB and other cooling manufacturers struggling to make a dent in the market or falling foul of financial issues, among other concerns, it got me thinking about whether this might just be the end for that age-old passion of ours. Liquid cooling might just be on its way out – at least, for the time being. 

 Then vs Now: what’s changed?



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