Deepcool CC560 V2 ARGB
Mid-tower case supporting up to 370mm GPUs and 175mm coolers. 4 fans included.
Best mid-tower under ₹5K. 4 ARGB fans, mesh front, room for full-size GPU and 360mm rad. Tough to beat at this price.
Official India stock. Full warranty through the brand's India service network, standard RMA if anything goes wrong.
Full specs
GPUs that fit (≤370mm)
Air coolers that fit
DeepCool CC560 V2 ARGB India Review 2025 — Four Fans for Under ₹7,000
Four ARGB Fans Out of the Box — The CC560 V2 Makes a Strong Case
At ₹5,000–7,000, the DeepCool CC560 V2 ARGB is playing a game most cases in this bracket can't win: four included fans with actual ARGB lighting, in a mid-tower ATX that doesn't look cheap on your desk. I've seen builders spend ₹3,000–4,000 on fans alone after buying a cheaper bare case. The CC560 V2 bundles everything in.
What the V2 Update Actually Fixes
The original CC560 had two issues: the ARGB implementation was inconsistent (color matching across fans was off) and the front panel felt plasticky. The V2 addresses both. The ARGB controller is revised — fans now sync properly with common motherboard headers including ASUS Aura Sync and MSI Mystic Light. The front panel refresh improves the I/O layout with a more accessible USB-A and USB-C arrangement.
Three 120mm ARGB fans sit at the front as intake; one 120mm ARGB fan at the rear as exhaust. That's a solid positive pressure configuration for a budget case — keeps dust from accumulating inside even without tight dust filter coverage. The front mesh panel allows reasonable air intake, though it's not as open as premium mesh cases like the Lian Li Lancool 216.
GPU clearance is 380mm — covers everything short of the most extreme triple-fan cards. Radiator support goes up to 360mm front or 240mm top. For a ₹6,000 case, that's more headroom than you'd expect.
India Pricing and Availability
The CC560 V2 ARGB sells for ₹5,000–7,000 in India. MDComputers and Amazon India are the most reliable sources. DeepCool India is distributed through Acro Engineering, which means warranty claims are handled locally — a meaningful advantage over grey market imports.
Flipkart lists it as well, but stock can be inconsistent. If you see it at ₹5,200–5,500 on Amazon, that's the sweet spot — don't overpay at ₹6,500+ when alternatives like the DeepCool CH510 exist at similar prices.
Who Should Buy This
You're building a mid-range gaming PC — Ryzen 5 7600, i5-13400F, or i5-14600K — with an RTX 4060 or RX 7600 class GPU. You want ARGB lighting without the post-purchase cost of separate fans. Your budget is tight and the case is the last priority. The CC560 V2 covers all of this efficiently.
Who Should Skip This
The steel panels are noticeably thin — flex is present when pressing sides. If build quality and rigidity matter to you (and they should at higher component tiers), step up to the Lancool 216 or DeepCool CH560. Also skip if you're building a high-TDP system — an i9 or Ryzen 9 paired with an RTX 4080 needs better airflow than this case can reliably provide at India's 35–40°C summer ambient. The CC560 V2 is a budget case; treat it accordingly.
Questions
It uses 5V ARGB (3-pin A-RGB) headers — compatible with ASUS Aura Sync, MSI Mystic Light, Gigabyte RGB Fusion, and ASRock Polychrome. It also includes a standalone controller if your motherboard lacks ARGB headers.
Yes — 360mm radiators fit at the front. You'll need to remove the HDD cage to accommodate the radiator length. For most gaming builds this is fine; if you need multiple HDDs, plan storage before committing.
Better ARGB sync, revised front panel I/O, and marginally improved cable routing. If you can find the original at ₹4,000–4,500, it's still decent. At similar pricing, always take the V2.