Review

PC Build: Ryzen 7700 in a Sakura Edition Case

  • Updated October 23, 2025
  • Hannah Lehmann
  • 5 comments

After deciding it was time for an upgrade from the hot and noisy Inwin A1, a new PC was assembled with a focus on both performance and aesthetics. The build centers around the AMD Ryzen 7700 processor, housed on an Erying Alkiad B650 ITX motherboard and paired with Juhor 32GB 6400MHz CL38 memory. For graphics, the Yeston 9070GRE Sakura Atlantis was selected, while storage is handled by a Fanxiang S790C 1TB SSD. Power is supplied by a Thermalright TR-SGFX 850W unit, and cooling is managed with a Jonsbo CR1400DV2 cooler, all neatly contained within the Cooler Master NR200P Sakura Edition case.

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5 Comments

  1. As someone who recently upgraded from a similar hot-and-noisy ITX case, I really appreciate how you balanced aesthetics and cooling in the NR200P Sakura Edition—that Yeston 9070GRE Sakura Atlantis GPU must pair beautifully with the case’s theme. My own build taught me how tricky small-form-factor cooling can be, so I’m curious whether you’ve tested thermals under load yet?

    1. Thanks for sharing your own ITX cooling journey—it’s always rewarding when aesthetics and thermals come together like this! I’ve stress-tested the system with Cinebench and gaming loads, and the Ryzen 7700 stays under 75°C thanks to the Jonsbo cooler and the NR200P’s mesh panel. If you’re optimizing your setup, try adjusting the fan curve in BIOS for a quieter idle; I’d love to hear how your build is performing too!

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