I had my two week vacation and as expected finished all the remodeling jobs I had planned, that meant the extra time was open for my cabinet construction!
Here are the results so far:

I am thrilled it is coming along so well. In terms of cabinet construction I need to mount one back panel still and I have to add a lot of hardware (hinges to the cp top, clamps to hold the cp in place, clamp on the front of the cabinet which is hinged).
The only thing I am slightly disappointed with so far is the placement of the hex on the side. I positioned it when the sides were laying flat and I was worried that they would be too close to the monitor inside to not allow me to fit the mirrors and lights behind them. So I went cautiously and moved them back and down. I really wish they were higher, it turns out I had the room to do it. I know I could plug and recut them but I think I'll just come up with some artwork to fill the space instead. Overall that is a really nitpicky complaint.
The amount of routing work that went into the cp was crazy. Because I am attempting to do the what I have dubbed the plexi/hardboard sandwhich on top of the control panel it meant that we had to route out the edges of the cp all the way around and then offset the t-molding slot so that it would all fit together under the t-molding. It also meant I had to recess the bottom for my trackball and of course all the standard recessing for joysticks. I've never used a router before this project and it was easier than I had feared and a lot of fun overall.
As for that crazy plexi/hardboard sandwich I was talking about I made some progress on that front as well. I got the first section cut out of the hardboard and then started to work on the plexi.

I've never really worked with plexiglass before (at least not since 8th grade shop class and that was over 25 years ago now). I should have done myself a favor and made my artwork a lot simpler....but I didn't

That means getting a lot of small angled cuts in the plexi, I was able to score and break a longer cut or two, then my hope was to slowly score my way through the smaller cuts. I'm sure anyone who has worked with plastic is now laughing at my ignorance, that was not going to happen in any reality that involves physics. So my next attempt was to try my dremel rotary tool...I was worried about fracturing and more importantly melting but I figured I would give it a go. I had some reinforced blades that were for cutting metal and the package said they were also good for plastics so I tried those. I had to work slow in small pulses to avoid heating but in the end it worked incredibly well!!!!!

In 15 minutes or so I had the top half of the piece ready to go. Tonight I should have some more time to finish this piece and then I'll wire it up with the LEDs and see if all this effort is going to achieve the effect I am hoping for (edge lit colored panels for each player).

More to come soon (I also have more photos of construction but I took those on my camera and the port to unload them to my computer broke so it will take me a bit of time to get them off of my SD card).