CES 2026

Digital Storm Debuts Vector and Aventum 5 at CES 2026, Redefining High-End Performance

Digital Storm today unveiled two new desktop platforms at CES 2026, Vector and Aventum 5, which showcase two distinct approaches to modern high-end computing: an unapologetically extreme liquid-cooled tower and a dramatically slimmer performance desktop that condenses serious hardware into a compact footprint.

Digital Storm splits the high-end PC in two: slim Vector and liquid-cooled Aventum 5 arrive at CES 2026.

Rethinking High-End Desktops

For the last decade, many high-end desktops have grown bigger, louder, and more power hungry in the race for peak numbers. Vector and Aventum 5 take a different path, focusing on how a PC performs and behaves over hours of rendering, creation, or AI workloads, not just what it hits in a 30-second benchmark run. Both platforms are engineered around modern CPUs from Intel and AMD and graphics options up to NVIDIA RTX 6000 Pro Blackwell.

“High-end desktops shouldn’t have to feel excessive just to be fast,” said Harjit Chana, Founder at Digital Storm. “With Vector and Aventum 5, we wanted to show that you can push hardware to its limits while still caring about thermals, acoustics, and the space it takes up on or under a desk.”

Vector: Compact, Dense, and Deliberate

With a much slimmer footprint than a traditional ATX tower, Vector measures roughly 473 Ă— 335 Ă— 99 mm, packing high-end hardware into a chassis just 99 mm wide. It focuses on performance density, carefully managing heat, airflow, and noise within a constrained volume while still supporting powerful CPUs and modern high-end GPUs. In its top configurations, Vector can be equipped with up to an NVIDIA RTX 6000 Pro Blackwell GPU paired with either an AMD Ryzen 9 9950X or an Intel Core Ultra 9 285K processor.

Aventum 5: Extreme Sustained Performance

Aventum 5 is Digital Storm’s latest expression of a no-compromise, fully liquid-cooled desktop, built for long-duration CPU and GPU workloads where stability and thermals matter as much as peak speed. The chassis has been redesigned from the inside out to prioritize radiator capacity, airflow routing, and serviceability, with the goal of keeping next-generation CPUs and RTX 6000-class GPUs performing at boost clocks for extended sessions. Aventum 5 also integrates a large display directly into the chassis, bringing real-time system telemetry and custom visuals into view without overlays or extra monitors.

Availability and Media Assets

Both Vector and Aventum 5 will be available with a wide range of configurations and are planned to be available to configure on digitalstorm.com in Q2 2026.

About The Author

Ben

I am the owner of Cerebral-overload.com and the Verizon Wireless Reviewer for Techburgh.com. My love of gadgets came from his lack of a Nintendo Game Boy when he was a child . I vowed from that day on to get his hands on as many tech products as possible. My approach to a review is to make it informative for the technofile while still making it understandable to everyone. Ben is a new voice in the tech industry and is looking to make a mark wherever he goes. When not reviewing products, I is also a 911 Telecommunicator just outside of Pittsburgh PA. Twitter: @gizmoboaks

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