This week MSI has announced a new X299 motherboard: the MSI X299 XPOWER GAMING AC. This is designed as a flagship motherboard for MSI's X299 range, and aims to combine gaming features and performance with the overclocking pedigree of their XPower family from previous generations. 

One thing that may jump out is MSI is adjusting its aesthetic scheme and returning back to a more neutral black on the XPower, a deviation from the recent generations where the XPower would get a 'titanium' silver treatment (or even older generations of XPower that were yellow). The theme agnostic color choice is due to the prevalence of RGB LEDs, found on both the “reactor” design of the chipset heatsink as well as above the I/O area on the shroud. The basic premise is that having customizable RGB LEDs should allow the motherboard to fit into more customized and themed builds, whereas some of the previous color designs may have pigeon-holed the design of systems. To contrast the dark color scheme, MSI has used their branded 'Steel Armor' protective coverings for the x16 PCIe slots, as well as the DIMM slots and the U.2 connector. 

For the X299 XPower Gaming AC, MSI uses a 14 phase power design which is claimed to help heavy overclocking, combined with a joined VRM and IO heatsink. MSI likes to promote the use of 'Military Class' components for the power delivery and other features, and claims that their use of isolated memory circuits that use optimized routing (to ensure optimal signals to and from the CPU and RAM) will allow each motherboard to reach DDR4-5000 or higher depending on the CPU memory controller, although they do not state on what cooling (likely, sub-zero).

One of the key features for this board will be the M.2 support. MSI is directly supporting three drives on board, but has also bundled a riser card for two more. For the onboard slots, MSI is using its new heatsink, the M.2 Shield Frozr. For the top M.2 slot, the heatsink is connected to the PCH heatsink in order to help move heat away. The bundled PCIe riser card is called MSI's XPander-Z, for M.2 slot expansion. This add-in-card gives a PCIe 3.0 x8 connection, and allows the user to mount two additional 110mm PCIe 3.0 x4 M.2 drives on it, giving the board a total of five M.2 slots. The expansion card setup supports Intel VROC technology, allowing a RAID-0 configuration directly from the CPU bypassing the typical throughput limits of PCIe 3.0 x4 slots.

 

Moving more towards the connectivity, the XPower features two Intel Gigabit LAN ports (Intel I219V and Intel I211), an 802.11ac 2x2 WiFi card, and a Realtek ALC1220 audio codec. MSI likes to promote its use of advanced audio design options, such as EMI shielding, PCB separation, corrosion resistant audio connectors, and bundled software. MSI also bundles traffic shaping software for the networking.

MSI used the ASMedia ASM3142 controller to deliver two USB 3.1 Gen2 ports, including a front panel header. They claim to have worked closely with several case manufacturers for product testing to ensure they are compatible with any MSI X299 motherboard. We've not particularly approached the ASM3142 controller in detail on AnandTech yet, but it represents a more power efficient variant of the ASM2142, which in turn is a dual-bandwidth version of the ASM1142, the first dual-port USB 3.1 (10 Gbps) controller we found on motherboards.

At the time of this writing, pricing and availability were not available.

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Source: MSI

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  • stanleyipkiss - Wednesday, July 12, 2017 - link

    If only they had added a 10GbE LAN port... All that M.2 throughput and nowhere for it to go.
  • shabby - Wednesday, July 12, 2017 - link

    Honestly how many gamers need to transfer stuff at those speeds to another computer in their home/basement?
  • HomeworldFound - Wednesday, July 12, 2017 - link

    Well honestly if I had it I'd probably use it. I'm getting to the point where it would be appreciated. Just because I might be a gamer (I hate that term) doesn't mean I don't do millions of other things on my computer and network.
  • edzieba - Wednesday, July 12, 2017 - link

    Five! Five Optane drives! Ah ha ha ha ha!
  • bigboxes - Wednesday, July 12, 2017 - link

    :D
  • prophet001 - Wednesday, July 12, 2017 - link

    lol

    This comment is underrated. Not that there's a rating system but still.
  • SanX - Wednesday, July 12, 2017 - link

    To sell more chips to the gaming and non-gaming but still power thirsty public, AMD would better push for dual-CPU mobos. Upcoming 16-core AMD chips will likely perform worse on games then two 8-core ones.

    If you worry about power, few dirty cheap solar panels from eBay will solve your extra consumption power forever.
  • shabby - Wednesday, July 12, 2017 - link

    You're likely wrong.
  • willis936 - Wednesday, July 12, 2017 - link

    You seem to have a misunderstanding with how solar works with the grid. It is not a "cheap, let's buy it off amazon" solution for supplemental power. That works if your power system is off the grid.

    Also dual CPU is not and likely will never be even power user territory. Threadripper's 64 PCIe lanes is already insane. If you have 2 GPUs and 5 NVMe drives all running at their max rated lane usage you'd still have 12 lanes leftover. I've heard something about bumping to six channels of memory. That's the future tbh.
  • CMDMC12 - Wednesday, July 12, 2017 - link

    Just because they bundled the add-in card doesn't mean this board has 5 M.2 slots.

    I came in here fully expecting some monstrosity with 5 actual on-board M.2 slots.

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