Yeah, that's what I meant by emerging from the gaming community.

Of course there are some overlaps between the case-modding scene and overclocking scene, but the extreme ends are essentially different. And I'm sure there are some groups that might find it interesting to see both a high-clocked system fit in a nice case. But, when trying to get the absolute most out of your system, which is what the die-hard overclocking is about these days, the case goes away.

Each community has their own hero's and things to aspire to. For you, as a casemodder, that's building a nice house for a system. For overclockers, it's people like Shamino who makes things look like a total mess and manages fantastic performance. Just how like a software engineers likes clean code and a mathematician likes certain equations.

That being said, I would definitly like to see a case-modder take on the project of bringing forward the beauty of extreme overclocking.