I spent yesterday to walk on the floor of Computex 2025, to consult the most recent and the largest IT technology of the year, and I was able to spend a lot of time at the MSI stand.
As one of the largest manufacturers of PC components in the world, MSI had a lot to show components on the front, from cases to power cards to motherboards, and all of this was what I expected from MSI (their components are excellent), or even better, limited publishing products and concepts that anyone who would like to include in their own PC construction.
From the premium construction side, the MSI Meg Maestro 900L is a real centerpiece of a PC case with a curved glass speaker on three sides with diamond chamfer edges and a support for a personalized liquid cooling loop. It is more or less a perfect case for a high -end construction which is not a completely personalized design.
Then, the construction of PC on the theme of the Ironmouse with Ironmouse brand components was fantastic, and it is the type of construction design and components that should inspire many manufacturers to opt for a similar look.

Obviously, graphics cards were a large part of the MSI stand this year, and that makes sense, because it regularly makes some of the best graphics cards on the market, in particular on the upper end of the battery, such as MSI GeForce RTX 5090 factor cards, but also smaller shape factor cards on the lower end of the battery like the new MSI GeForce 5060 TI.

Of course, with so many components, you can build an entire PC from MSI parts, and MSI has done everything possible to present some of its DIY innovations that aim to make PC construction easier and less intimidating for manufacturers for the first time.

In addition to its range of consumer graphics cards, MSI has also shown new MSI GeForce RTX 5080 OC and RTX 4080 Super Expert OC cards with a COOL Grill Design Integrated in their shrouds.
There were also impressive special publishing cards presented, such as MSI GeForce RTX 5070 Cyclone Visual OC, which is a unique and large -scale design that has an LCD screen in the center.

Of course, there was also the SOC MSI GeForce RTX 5090 Suprim Titanium Edition card with a Lux golden color finish. How much this card would make you go back, I cannot say, but I cannot imagine that it is cheap, even according to RTX 5090 standards.

But the component that really stole my heart on the MSI stand yesterday was a simple medium, the one I am not even sure that you could buy alone, but which would come with the MSI MPG Coreliquid P13 360 AIO Cooking.

You see, here is the thing. I test a lot of processors for my criticisms and my features, which often involves me to exchange motherboards with different chipsets. But in order to keep the comparable results between the Intel and AMD processors, I really need everything else on the test bench to stay the same, including the AIO cooler.
The problem, however, is that the assembly of processor cooler between AMD and Intel is not standardized. Instead, the two flea manufacturers have their mounting screws differently oriented. The fresher assemblies of the Intel processor form a square, while AMD forms a rectangle with an unequal length and height.
This means that I have to exchange the mounting support for the AIO cooler each time I switch between the two flea brands, and losing one of these supports is an absolute nightmare that could destroy the test days. I know it because it happened to me more than once.

Enter Unibracket MSI. A unique support that works with the Intel LGA Motherboard montages 1700/1851 and AMD AM4 / AM5.
As soon as I saw unibracket, I wanted to shout, because the solution to the problem is so blindly obvious, I do not understand how this part is not standardized in each manufacturer of CPU cooler.
Their loss is the gain of MSI, however, as once I get a co -coreliquid cooler P13 360 AIO in the laboratory, it is almost guaranteed to be my processor cooler for the test bench in the predictable future.














