Asus' ROG G1000 is a new high-performance desktop, which is designed around a custom chassis developed by ROG. The focus here is on thermal separation, hardware stability, and long-term upgradeability. The company teased this desktop last month in December as well.
The ROG G1000 supports up to AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D processors paired with up to Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 graphics. Asus builds the system on an X870 motherboard designed in-house by ROG. Memory support includes DDR5 with AEMP II, Asus' automatic memory profile tuning designed to upgrade stability and performance without manual configuration.
Cooling is a central design feature of the G1000. The chassis uses a tri-zone airflow layout, which separates internal components into three thermal domains to reduce heat interference between the CPU, GPU, and other components. A 420 mm AIO liquid cooler is integrated into what Asus calls the "ROG Thermal Atrium," a dedicated chamber that pulls fresh air directly from outside the case rather than recycling internal air. This layout is expected to maintain consistent thermal behavior under sustained high loads.
The ROG G1000 is built with tool-less access and standard-sized components for the sake of easier upgrades and maintenance compared to more proprietary desktop designs. On the exterior, the desktop features ROG AniMe Holo, a full-color holographic lighting panel integrated into the chassis. Physical quick control keys are also built into the case, which provides direct access to system functions without software interaction. The overall design is more about the visibility of internal components while keeping airflow paths clearly defined.
Pricing and regional availability for the Asus ROG G1000 have not yet been disclosed.
Source(s)
Asus (via press release)
















