A life sized Miku that is actually a gaming PC
If you have ever lined your desk with anime figures and thought you might have gone too far, wait until you see this. At WirForce 2025 in Taiwan, creators 黃小潔Jerry and Herbie unveiled a two metre tall Hatsune Miku that is not just a statue. It is a fully working high end gaming PC.
The build first blew up on TikTok, and it is easy to see why. Imagine a giant Miku standing in your room with Asus ROG themed hardware flaring out of her back like cyberpunk wings. It is part art piece, part flex, and probably a serious dusting nightmare, but it is also one of the most unique PC builds you are likely to see this year.
Despite how wild it looks, the creators did not just glue some parts to a statue. Underneath the colourful exterior, there is a proper industrial structure and carefully planned components. This is a real machine you can game on, not just a convention prop.
How the giant Miku PC was built
According to 黃小潔Jerry, the final design for the PC took around two weeks to nail down. That was only the beginning. Actually building the thing was a much longer grind involving metalwork, 3D printing, painting, and a whole team of people.
Inside Miku there is an industrial grade metal frame built by Taiwa Precise Technique. This hidden skeleton keeps the whole two metre tall PC stable and safe to use. It is what lets the creators mount heavy hardware and a ton of 3D printed parts without worrying that their digital diva will collapse.
The outer form of Miku was made using about 80 separate 3D printed pieces from Faesun Technology. For the creator, picking up those 3D parts was an emotional moment. He described it as feeling like seeing his daughter being born. That gives you an idea of how much personal passion went into this project.
Those printed parts are not just glued in place. Many of the panels around the torso and back are magnetically attached. That is not only smart for transport and setup, it is also crucial for actual PC maintenance. With removable sections, the team can get to the internals for cable management, upgrades, and cleaning without needing to tear the whole figure apart.
To get everything looking as clean as it does on camera, the build went through a lot of prototyping, welding, sanding, and airbrushing. The final result does not look like a rough mod. It looks like a collectible figure that just happens to be hiding a monster gaming system inside.
Serious gaming hardware inside the figure
For all its cosplay energy on the outside, this Miku build is running legit high end PC parts. The heart of the system is an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 graphics card, one of the most powerful GPUs you can get right now. The article even calls this the most impressive RTX 5080 build they have seen so far, which is saying something when people are out here mounting GPUs onto skateboards.
For the processor, the creators went with team red. Inside the Miku PC is an AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D. That chip is known for its strong gaming performance thanks to its extra cache. It is a fun detail that the build literally brings Nvidia and AMD together inside a single Vocaloid themed chassis.
Cooling is handled by an Asus ROG Ryuo IV liquid cooler, and that is where one of the weirdest visual features comes in. If you have seen clips of the build, you might have noticed a curved display sitting in Miku’s abdomen. That is actually the 6.6 inch 2K AMOLED screen built into the ROG cooler.
This mini display can show system stats, animations, or custom images, which turns Miku’s midsection into a live system monitor. It sounds intense, but it also means you are not forced to stare awkwardly at her belly button all the time. You could show your CPU temps, fan speeds, or even a looping Miku music video if you really want to lean into the theme.
All this hardware is tucked neatly into the body with those removable magnetic panels providing access. When everything is closed up, the rig looks more like a giant premium figure than a PC. Only the glowing fans and the wing like GPUs and components at the back give away what is going on inside.
Why this Miku PC hits so hard
This project sits at the intersection of PC modding, cosplay culture, and anime fandom. On one level, it is a flex build that shows what is possible when you combine industrial fabrication, 3D printing, and modern hardware. On another, it is a love letter to Hatsune Miku and to the creativity of the community around her.
For beginners looking at this and feeling overwhelmed, it is worth remembering that even the most extreme rigs start from the same basic ideas.
- You need a solid frame or case to hold your parts.
- You plan airflow and cooling around powerful hardware.
- You design the outer look around the components, not the other way around.
- You think about future access for cables, upgrades, and cleaning.
This Miku PC just pushes every one of those points to an extreme. Instead of a standard tower case, it uses a life sized figure with a metal skeleton. Instead of a normal side panel, it has 80 custom 3D printed parts that snap on with magnets. Instead of a small LCD on the case front, it throws a curved AMOLED screen into the character’s torso.
Would most people want a two metre tall anime vocalist looming in their gaming room? Probably not. But as a showcase of what is possible and as a piece of tech art, it is unforgettable. It shows that PC building is not just about frame rates and benchmarks. It can also be a canvas for fandom, creativity, and some truly wild ideas.
Original article and image: https://www.pcgamer.com/hardware/this-2-meter-tall-statue-of-hatsune-miku-is-actually-a-gaming-pc-the-gaming-pc-of-my-dreams-that-is/
