DeepCool is clearly leaning into the whole “showpiece cooling” trend this year, and the SILENTNOX PRO 360 is probably the most straightforward example of that direction. I saw it up close at their Computex 2026 booth, and yes, the curved screen is the main attraction, but there’s more going on here than just aesthetics.
This is DeepCool’s first curved-screen liquid cooler, packing a 6.67-inch 2K AMOLED display. In person, the curve actually makes sense. It’s not just for looks, it improves viewing angles inside a case, especially if you’re running a showcase build with tempered glass. Compared to flat LCD pump tops we’ve been seeing everywhere, this one feel more intentional rather than gimmicky.

Underneath that display, DeepCool is using what they call a 7th-gen pump design. They’re positioning it as flagship-level cooling, though as usual, we’ll need proper thermal testing to see where it actually lands. Marketing claims aside, the hardware itself looks solid and consistent with what you’d expect from their higher-end AIO lineup.
One practical detail I appreciated is the 360-degree rotatable magnetic top cover with wireless connectivity. That means easier alignment regardless of mounting orientation, and less cable mess, something a lot of builders will care about, especially in clean builds.
They’re also pushing their DeepCreative software for customization. No surprises here, this is where you control the display, stats, and visuals.
The fan hub design is another subtle change, going from mirror to transparent. It’s a small detail, but it fits the overall theme: this cooler is meant to be seen, not hidden.
Compatibility-wise, it supports multiple platforms and includes offset mounting, which is useful for newer CPUs that benefit from better cold plate positioning.
At the end of the day, the SILENTNOX PRO 360 feels like DeepCool responding to what the market is clearly asking for, bigger displays, cleaner builds, and more visual customization. The curved AMOLED gives it an edge visually, but the real question is whether performance and software can keep up.
For now, it’s one of the more interesting AIOs on the floor, not because it reinvents cooling, but because it knows exactly what kind of builds people are trying to make in 2026.






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