
Product Name: TURRIS 620
Brand: TRYX
Offer price: 599
Currency: MYR
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Appearance - 9/10
9/10
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Features - 8.5/10
8.5/10
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Materials - 8.5/10
8.5/10
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Performance - 8.5/10
8.5/10
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User Experience (UX) - 8/10
8/10
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Value - 8/10
8/10
Summary
The TRYX TURRIS 620 sets a new bar on what a premium air cooler can achieve, with excellent cooling and impeccable aesthetics all packaged in a competitive bang-for-buck.
Overall
8.4/10Pros
+ Excellent cooling performance
+ Quiet dual-fan setup
+ Great aesthetics & 5-inch IPS display
+ Mostly pre-assembled out of the box
Cons
β None
Unboxing



TRYX is on quite the hot streak lately, releasing one great product after another; this time, weβre looking at the companyβs first tower cooler in TURRIS 620, which unsurprisingly aims for the high-end segment with the usual bells and whistles, and then some. Opening this box reveals the pre-assembled cooler protected by thick foam packaging, whilst the accessories are all stored in a separate box, as shown above.

The accessories include screws and brackets for four socket types only: Intel LGA1700 (12th/13th/14th Gen Core), Intel LGA1851 (Arrow Lake), AMD Socket AM4, and AMD Socket AM5. On top of that, youβre given the neon green colored user manual, a TRYX a-01 thermal paste, and a screwdriver for easy access into the two bracket offset screws hidden within the middle fan.
Walkaround






The TRYX TURRIS 620βs dual-fan design meant that this tower cooler is quite bulky by its standards, although the company did its due diligence in making sure it doesnβt interfere with other parts, like RAM (weβll talk about this in detail later in this review). This all-white build features two blocks of heatsinks, with a stacked fan design instead of the push-pull design that is also a pretty common configuration out there. Coming back to the heatsinks, we notice the exhaust side has concave sections similar to the ones youβll find on the NVIDIAβs RTX 5090 FE GPU, presumably on the same principle to reduce turbulence and thus, noise.



At the bottom, youβll find the claimed 280W cooling capacity is done by having twelve heatpipes splits into six each side, each taken care by one fan. In the center is the contact point between the cooler and the CPU, and right behind it is the offset plate that allows the cooler to be installed on different sockets. In our unit, the screws are placed on the βAβ side β stands for AMD β while the βUβ side is for Intel Core Ultra processors (LGA1851). For some reason, TRYXβs documentation didnβt mention the screw location for LGA1700 sockets, which we think is an oversight on their part.




The key feature of the TURRIS 620 is the 5-inch IPS display on the top of the cooler, occupying the top half of the surface (whereas the bottom half is simply a reflective surface). Itβs got a 720p resolution (1280 x 720), 60Hz refresh rate, and 8-bit color (16.7M colors), and brightness rated up to 500 nits, which should be no problem for any kind of indoor environments.
Itβs connected via a USB 2.0 connection that converts into pogo pins, with the display panel magnetically attached to the cooler to provide the power and signal. Like the TRYX STAGE 360 we reviewed before, the display module comes with a dedicated processor so it doesnβt eat into host systemβs resources for telemetry or video display.




The cooling fans are the same TRYX ROTA 120 fans youβll find in other TRYX AIOs, although in this case it has been slightly modified to include a rail slider bracket that allows you to simply slide the fans into the slot, greatly improve the ease of installation and removal if maintenance is ever required. On that note, TRYX took RAM clearance into account and allows the outward fan to extend slightly upward to free up more space for taller modules, up to 55mm. If you donβt require that extra space, simply push it downward and itβll sit flush with the display attached.
Specifications
TRYX TURRIS 620
Full specifications available on theΒ product webpage.
| CPU Socket Compatibility | Intel:Β LGA1851/1700 AMD:Β Socket AM5/AM4 | |
| Heatsink Dimensions | 127.5 Γ 135 Γ 159 mm 165 x 135 x 165 mm (with fan) | |
| Fan(s) | Model | 1x TRYX ROTA 120 (120 mm) |
| Size | 120 x 120 x 25 mm* *Excluding rail mounts | |
| Speed | 500-1850 (Β±10%) RPM (primary) 500-1800 (Β±10%) RPM (secondary) | |
| Max Airflow | 66.32 CFM / 112.68 mΒ³/h | |
| Max Pressure | 2.1 mmHβO | |
| Max Noise | 27.42 dBA (per fan) / 32.5 dBA (both fans) | |
| MTTF | Unspecified | |
| Onboard Display | 5.0-inch IPS display 1280 x 720 resolution 60Hz refresh rate 500 nits brightness | |
| Included Accessories | Intel socket backplate Intel standoff screws Intel socket bracket AMD standoff screws AMD socket bracket Locking screws Screwdriver TRYX a-01 thermal paste | |
Test System
| CPU | Intel Core i9-13900K |
| Cooling | TRYX TURRIS 620 Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut |
| Motherboard | ASUS ROG Maximus Z790 Dark Hero |
| GPU | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 Founders Edition |
| Memory | ADATA XPG CASTER DDR5-6000 CL30 (2x16GB) |
| Storage | ADATA LEGEND 960 MAX 1TB |
| Power Supply | Cooler Master MWE Gold 1250 V2 Full Modular (ATX12V 2.52) 1250W |
| Case | VECTOR Bench Case (Open-air chassis) |
| Operating System | Windows 11 Home 24H2 |
Installation



We demonstrate the installation process with our Intel Core i9-13900K, based on the older LGA1700 socket. Start by slotting the backplate into the 78x78mm socket slot, then install the standoffs to secure it in place. Then, put the bracket plates horizontally β make sure to align the marked arrows toward the processor β then secure it with the locking screws. The installation process is highly similar on AMD sockets, except you donβt need the backplate in those cases.

Since we use LGA1700-based processor, thereβs no exact documentation on where the screws should go. We decided to stick with the Core Ultraβs position and found no hotspots on the processor during our testing process. The spring-loaded screws should align, simply proceed if you can successfully align it to the bracketβs attachment points.


Hereβs how it looks like with memory modules installed β our XPG LANCER kit is a relatively low-profile variant that allows the outward-facing cooler to stay at its default position. Those with RGB RAM kits will likely require extra space, for which you can simply push it upward to do so.
Performance



So, how did the dual-fan configuration perform in terms of cooling? Excellent β at 120W and 180W TDPs, the TURRIS 620 make light work of the heat and is the coolest of them all, and itβs even capable of keeping up with a power-hungry 250W Intel Core i9 with a small bit of thermal headroom to spare (itβs not on the same level as top-tier AIOs, but itβs pretty close).
This is pretty much the worst-case scenario given that Core Ultra processors runs much cooler at the socket, perhaps with the sole exception being the Core Ultra 9 285K with the 295W mode, itself very difficult to achieve in real-life workloads. Meanwhile, AMD processors donβt output as much heat at stock, so this is impressive considering all of these is done by air cooling.
*Note: we use our Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut thermal paste as part of our standard testing, for the performance data on the included TRYX a-01 thermal paste, click here.

Despite being a dual-fan setup, the noise performance is way above our expectations by being one of the quietest in this list, measuring 42dBA even with both fans at full speed. TRYX employed some tricks for this, including a slightly offset fan speeds to avoid noise harmonics, and it does show in the result; that being said, pushing the fan to the limit will produce some whiny noise which you can hear for yourself in the sound file above (note that we increased the volume of this recording). Still, itβs about as quiet as you can expect out of a dual-fan cooler.
Software



In terms of software, we should note that there are two versions available on the website, and make sure you pick βKANALI for STAGEβ before you begin. (For reference, the version we use at the time of this review is 2.1.0.)
For configuring TURRISβs display, simply head to its section on the left panel and you can immediately start choosing the presets to display, as well as any additional telemetry you wish to put alongside it. If youβre feeling creative, you can also upload your own clips too. The panelβs brightness and main switch is located on the top right of the app UI, so you can adjust accordingly based on your environment.
TRYX is also keen to point out that if you ever encountered issues, their customer support is powered by real humans, not AI chatbots; thereβs also a six-year warranty on the cooler, plus a separate three-year warranty on the LCD display to give you extra peace of mind.
Verdict

Granted, the RM599 price tag may look expensive at first, but with its AIO-like cooling performance and aesthetics it offers, youβll be getting a lot out of the TRYX TURRIS 620 tower cooler. This is just about as good a tower cooler as they get, and for this price? Weβll happily take it.

Special thanks to Sun Cycle Sdn Bhd (TRYX local distributor) for providing the TRYX TURRIS 620 cooler for this review.
