Conclusion

The XPower Gaming AC is the best of what MSI has to offer in X299 form. If bells and whistles are your thing, it has just about one of each.

  1. Five total M.2 slots with full bandwidth? Check.
  2. Ten SATA ports? Check. U.2 port? Check.
  3. Dual NICs and Wi-Fi? Check.
  4. Ten hybrid fan/pump headers? Check. 
  5. Robust power delivery and VRM heatsink? Check.
  6. USB 3.1 ports on the back and front panel? Check.
  7. Features for extreme overclocking? Check.

The list goes on, but as we have seen over the past few pages, the XPower Gaming AC has just about everything one can have on this platform. If it was missing anything, it would be a 10 GbE port (as are all but one or two X299 boards). 

The power delivery and heatsink configuration kept the power delivery well within its specified temperature range even while overclocking, peaking at 71C during the extended OCCT testing. We did hit 4.7 GHz with this CPU without issue. Overall, the board is a more than capable overclocker. I wish I had some time and a full dewar of liquid nitrogen to push it further.

All three M.2 slots on the board are heatsinked with the primary M.2 slot using a larger and heavier piece of metal to keep what is underneath it cool. Unfortunately that M.2 slot is not the one that is powered by the CPU: the third one is instead. There is a total of 10 USB ports on the back from USB 2.0 up to USB 3.1 (10 Gbps), which is more than we see on most boards. 

MSI's software worked without issue for our uses in testing. The Live Update app picked up and installed the latest drivers just fine. The Command Center software is one of the more complete Windows-based software applications for motherboards around. Users are able to control all the fans with it off of any of the 10 hybrid headers, make adjustments for overclocking (BCLK/CPU Ratio/Voltages/RAM Timings etc), or just monitor the system status. 

The overall build quality on the XPower was solid. The included metal shield on the back cover protects any pertinent bits under it, and also reinforces the motherboard. This shield is not connected to anything outside of the mount points so it is for aesthetics and rigidity only. The dual heatsinks for cooling the power delivery area kept temperatures in an acceptable range, well under any thresholds for the hardware so users should be set in that respect. 

Performance in our testing was again solid with the XPower Gaming AC results generally landing in the top half of results in nearly all testing. Power use was a bit high in idle states and boot times were a bit slower than the most of the datasets we have, otherwise, that is really the only shortcomings. In the end, our results show the board boosted and used its MCE like the majority of boards we tested. 

The MSI X299 XPower Gaming AC's $440 price tag and features have it competing with boards that are also full of features. The ASUS Prime X299-Deluxe is $475 but has less SATA ports and two M.2 ports compared with the five possible out of the box with the XPower, but has a unique OLED display. ASRock's flagship Fatal1ty X299 Professional Gaming i9 XE costs $390 and gives you 10 GbE onboard, ten SATA ports, and three M.2 slots - though it is missing U.2 connectivity if that is important. The other offering in that price range is GIGABYTE's X299 flagship Designare EX at $450, which also three well heatsinked M.2 slots but is also missing out on the U.2 port. Clearly, this isn't an exhaustive rundown for feature comparison, but I did want to point out some of the high-level differences. The appearance of the board, use case, and how necessary dome features are will point users to the right board for them. In this price range, do like the XPower Gaming AC's price point and feature set in comparison with the other boards we listed, especially if there are plans to be M.2 drive heavy.

The MSI X299 XPower Gaming AC is, overall a good motherboard capable of supporting the most power hungry CPUs for the platform. There are enough features here to support the board as a flagship offering. The overclocking ability is there, as are nearly all the features users could want. The XPower's selling point, in this reviewer's opinion, is in the extra features. For anyone building an extreme HEDT system, with a good CPU and multiple PCIe devices with high storage requirements, the MSI X299 XPower Gaming AC fits the bill. 

Other AnandTech X299 Motherboard Reviews:

To read specifically about the X299 chip/platform and the specifications therein, our deep dive into what it is can be found at this link.

Overclocking with the i9-7900X
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  • BPB - Wednesday, May 9, 2018 - link

    Sigh, I guess I can always dream about owning such an expensive board. But I can't imagine anybody who is budget conscious or not rich buying one. I wonder how MSI and the others sell enough boards like this to justify making them.
  • Achaios - Wednesday, May 9, 2018 - link

    Unfortunately, the era of me dreaming of motherboards and CPU's passed long ago with no signs of returning. Nowadays, the only thing I usually dream of is East Asian fleshpots and lots and lots of ambitious girls in, out, on top and below. Do I miss the time my only interest in the world was my Pentium 4, my NVIDIA GO GPU with 128 megs of RAM and World of Warcraft? Sometimes yes but not really.
  • WinterCharm - Wednesday, May 9, 2018 - link

    Hands down the funniest comment I’ve read on here in a long time :)
  • Ket_MANIAC - Wednesday, May 9, 2018 - link

    And another great X299 review. Expecting at least a dozen more such reviews and expecting no review for any AM4 boards or X470 boards at all because who buys cheap stuff. Come on guys, is it really that hard? People already blame you guys to being Intel shills and all and reviews such as these only add fuel to their talk. Not that the review is bad but what reason could you have for this megaload of X299 reviews?
  • rsandru - Wednesday, May 9, 2018 - link

    Agreed, X299 is going to be replaced soon anyway so even for potential Intel HEDT buyers all those motherboards are most likely non starters... And this one still sports the tiny VRM heat sink that was repeatedly pointed out as being insufficient.

    To round this perfectly marketed product there’s the ‘gaming’ in the name, as if anyone whose main interest is playing games would pick an X299 platform over a Z370.
  • Peter2k - Wednesday, May 9, 2018 - link

    You'd be surprised how many gamers where absolutely convinced they need quad channel and a bazillion pcie-x lanes for that sweet sweet quad GPU setup they gonna have one day so that they don't throttle when using many M2 SSD's

    Marketing must be doing a great job these days

    Surprisingly it's the sort of same amount of gamers that don't know that quad GPU setups are dead
    Quad channel doesn't do anything for gaming (or most use cases anyway)

    Ehh
    As long as there are LED's on it
  • Ket_MANIAC - Thursday, May 10, 2018 - link

    What I am baffled about is the lack of AM4 motherboard reviews from AnandTech. They are one of the few publications out here who do motherboard reviews right and just 6 reviews in over a year, out of which 3 are boards that no body ever buys when talking about AM4. Yes, they have covered a lot of Ryzen stuff lately. And motherboard reviews are generally not as important as CPU. But if that's the case, how do you justify "16" X299 reviews? And no X399? I might be coming of as an AMD fanboy, so hold your horses. I am an AMD fan. Not a fanboy. It doesn't take an Einstein to know which among the X299 and AM4 is more important and which among the X299 and X399 is more successful.
  • DanNeely - Thursday, May 10, 2018 - link

    Mobo Reviewer A is doing all of the x299 boards in a single giant batch.

    Mobo Reviewer B is doing all of the AM4 boards in a single giant batch.

    The selection of boards they get to review come down to what manufactures send as press samples. There're enough of those to keep all the reviewers busy full time so Anandtech rarely if ever buys retail boards to review.

    There currently isn't an active Mobo Reviewer C, so any x399 samples that've been sent in are waiting until A or B clears his current backlog; or one of the other contributors clears out the backlog of what they're currently working on and can step in on mobos again. (eg E. Fylladitakis did a batch of mobos last summer between his keyboard and PSU reviews.)
  • Ket_MANIAC - Thursday, May 10, 2018 - link

    Quite alright but doesn't 16 X299 reviews seem to you as pointless? I don't know if you are representing Anandtech but if you are, don't you think more AM4 stuff would bring more readership to your website? You guys have the power to choose which boards you review among the ones that manufacturers send you and I don't think it is possible that Asus has never sent the Crosshair VI Hero or the VII Hero to you(from the CPU review, I see they had), ASRock never sent the X370 Taichi to you. Wouldn't reviewing these boards make more sense right now considering the 2000 series just launched?
  • PeachNCream - Wednesday, May 9, 2018 - link

    It's another X299 MSI motherboard review, because we really need to hear more about MSI products since there are no other vendors out there that produce computer parts.

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