I was a little late to the air fryer hype. For years, friends and $\text{and}$ family implored me to get one, promising I wouldn't regret it. While I finally have one, it seems the industry has already moved on from food to the air fryer gaming PC.

SignalRGB is back to its usual absurdist antics. We have seen their wilder creations before, such as a microwave gaming PC featuring a working screen on the front. This new creation is equally bizarre—though thankfully, it isn't an actual component fryer. It is simply a very peculiar duo-PC chassis.

The Specs of the SignalRGB Air Fryer Gaming PC

Highlighted by DaKrazyKid on Reddit—who appears to be running some form of company promo for SignalRGB—this setup features two fully independent gaming PCs built inside a single air fryer oven. While the concept is wild, the hardware is surprisingly specific:

  • GPU: NVIDIA RTX 5060
  • CPU: Intel Core Ultra 5 (presumably a 245K or, if we're lucky, a 250KF Plus)
  • Storage: 1 TB SSD
  • Memory: 16 GB of RAM

It seems even an air fryer gaming PC is feeling the pinch of the "RAMpocalypse."

A Peculiar Duo-PC Chassis Design

The build features a visual display on each of the front doors, which swing open and connect to the PCs via a wriggly cable (a technical term). The two PCs are racked on top of each other, with all necessary ports accessible on the back of the unit.

Owning such a setup might present some social challenges. Explaining this build to a prospective partner on a date could be a major red flag. You might find yourself saying, "Don't worry about that, it's just my two gaming PCs inside an air fryer," but even if the video claims "it'd be a crime not to have this PC," that might not convince them.

Enter the SignalRGB Giveaway

If you want to add this chaos to your setup, you may actually have a chance at winning one of these duo-PC setups by participating in SignalRGB's giveaway.

It would be quite the flex to own such a unique build during ongoing supply issues and price fluctuations. However, you might want to keep it as a "sleeper build" and avoid showing it off to friends stuck with single-PC setups and standard cases. They might not share your enthusiasm for an air fryer gaming PC when they are struggling with inflated hardware prices.