CES award outs MSI's monstrous 1600W RTX 5090 Lightning GPU — new flagship has next generation liquid cooling, dual 16-pin power connectors, and a surface-mounted LCD display

MSI Lightning
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

MSI's Lightning brand of GPUs have represented the company's highest-tier offerings, but they've been on a hiatus these past few generations. Fortunately, the iconic line-up is being revived with a new RTX 5090 Lightning, overtaking the Suprim X as MSI's flagship 5090 variant. While the card hasn't been officially shown off yet, a new CES Innovation Awards listing has unveiled much of the specifics.

On the CES awards page, it mostly talks about the cards cooling prowess, "A next-generation pump optimizes flow dynamics, feeding MSI’s patented hybrid-density radiator with zoned fin spacing for superior heat exchange. A silent, high-pressure axial fan with newly designed aerodynamic blades further boosts static pressure at low noise." The main takeaway is the mention of a "reinforced high-power PCB and premium VRM." This refers to an insane 40 power phases, higher than even Galax HOF 5090D's 36/38-phase VRM, capable of delivering up to 1600W of power via dual 12V-2x6 connectors.

Those will probably go well with MSI's new power supply promising to prevent your 5090's 16-pin connector from melting, a situation only exacerbated by having two of them. Evidently, we saw this GPU break world records just yesterday. There will also be a dedicated mobile app to take advantage of the card's unique design.

That transitions us nicely into aesthetics. Prior leaks have already shown us what the GPU looks like — it's a liquid-cooled card with the tubes protruding from the right side, connected to a 360mm radiator. There's a massive screen on one side of the card, and the CES page notes that it can display real-time system visualizations and a companion app enables users to monitor and tweaking overclock settings on the go. The teaser MSI shared also features quick glances at the fans on that aforementioned rad. As you'd expect, the design language leans heavily into a gaming aesthetic, with sharp lines and tasteful RGB accents all around.

MSI Lightning

(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

At the core (no pun intended), it's still an RTX 5090 so expect all the same specs, just turned up a notch due to the extra overclocking headroom. Reports of a monstrous 2500W XOC BIOS are also floating around, suggesting a new enthusiast champ in the industry. Unfortunately, that same industry is currently navigating a memory crisis, so the 32 GB of GDDR7 VRAM onboard might hike up the card's price even more.

That's not to say it was ever going to be cheap without it. Make no mistake — we're looking at $4,000+ here since this card competes with (and surpasses, in most aspects) the ROG Matrix Platinum RTX 5090, which did retail for $4,000, and that came out before the DRAM shortage took effect. Therefore, availability might become another concern, but seeing how this GPU will only be targeted at extreme overclockers, inventory probably won't be an issue.

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Hassam Nasir
Contributing Writer

Hassam Nasir is a die-hard hardware enthusiast with years of experience as a tech editor and writer, focusing on detailed CPU comparisons and general hardware news. When he’s not working, you’ll find him bending tubes for his ever-evolving custom water-loop gaming rig or benchmarking the latest CPUs and GPUs just for fun.

With contributions from
  • JarredWaltonGPU
    I know why products like this exist. I still think they're dumb. I already worry about how much power a stock RTX 5090 draws, at 575W~600W. Overclocking to the point where you might be pulling >1000W is just insane. But then, if you're doing that, you probably didn't buy the card in the first place and are just trying to set a performance record with LN2 or liquid helium.
    Reply
  • awake283
    Honesty, what is the use case scenario for this? Who needs this and could take full advantage of it? Skeptic in me says these cards are pointless and are mostly made to target whales who make dumb purchases.
    Reply
  • thestryker
    JarredWaltonGPU said:
    I know why products like this exist. I still think they're dumb. I already worry about how much power a stock RTX 5090 draws, at 575W~600W. Overclocking to the point where you might be pulling >1000W is just insane.
    Even at 1000W it's pulling less power per cable than a stock 5090. If someone got this and was running at a 700-800W power limit they'd have a top performing 5090 and the cable risk would be around that of a 5070 Ti. I'd argue buying a 5090 currently (cheapest I saw the other day was ~$3300 USD) isn't a rational monetary purchase to begin with so why not buy the one that draws the least amount of power per cable?

    Don't get me wrong I think a 5090 is silly to begin with and felt the same about the 4090 and 3090. I run my 3080 at 300W the vast majority of the time (400W default BIOS) and wouldn't seriously consider a card that was over 400W. There is a market for the halo cards though and given the low margins built into the 12VHPWR/2x6 spec every 5090 should have two connectors.
    Reply
  • awake283
    thestryker said:
    Even at 1000W it's pulling less power per cable than a stock 5090. If someone got this and was running at a 700-800W power limit they'd have a top performing 5090 and the cable risk would be around that of a 5070 Ti. I'd argue buying a 5090 currently (cheapest I saw the other day was ~$3300 USD) isn't a rational monetary purchase to begin with so why not buy the one that draws the least amount of power per cable?

    Don't get me wrong I think a 5090 is silly to begin with and felt the same about the 4090 and 3090. I run my 3080 at 300W the vast majority of the time (400W default BIOS) and wouldn't seriously consider a card that was over 400W. There is a market for the halo cards though and given the low margins built into the 12VHPWR/2x6 spec every 5090 should have two connectors.
    My 4070S sits around 225W, which honestly, I might prefer to some higher power alternatives. At least it works, and wont burn my house down.
    Reply