PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing.

Hands On With MSI's MEG Vision X AI PC: Now, Your Desktop Tower's a Monitor, Too

A standout desktop PC at CES 2025, the Vision X AI has a superpower: a front face that's 100% touch display. (You can use it as a second monitor, a dashboard, or a giant control panel.)

 & Matthew Buzzi Principal Writer, Hardware
 & John Burek Executive Editor and PC Labs Director
Our Experts
LOOK INSIDE PC LABS HOW WE TEST
65 EXPERTS
43 YEARS
41,500+ REVIEWS
(unknown)

LAS VEGAS--At CES 2025, we have been covering a vast fleet of laptops and desktops packing the very latest components, but we're seeing a lot of familiar, last-year designs, just refreshed with new innards. MSI brought along one of the few desktop PCs with a wholly original look: its MEG Vision X AI 2nd gaming desktop.

This tower certainly has some interesting features inside the box. But its main draw is a full-size vertical screen on the front panel. We first saw this PC as a prototype (surrounded, mind you, by a mob every time we visited it) back at Computex 2024, and it’s resurfaced as a fully functional, release-ready PC.

The Vision X AI 2nd features Intel’s "Arrow Lake" 200S processors (that's what the "2nd" is all about, given this is, er, only the first instance of this PC), Nvidia graphics, liquid cooling, and some nifty interior-cleanup features. The Vision X will launch in Q2 of this year, with pricing and more specific availability details to come later. Watch the video above for a quick tour of the system, and read for our impressions and more information below.


An Extra Display Right Inside Your Tower

This is a substantial tower, and its size serves the functional purpose of making the front-panel display tall and wide enough to be useful; a narrower case would diminish the point and impact of the screen. The case's full HD touch display runs down nearly the entire front of the chassis. It's approximately 13.3 inches and resembles a big, glossy laptop screen turned on end. In my poking and prodding, it was highly responsive, and, even though full HD is a little low-res these days, it's perfectly fine for the panel size and what it is, and it looks brilliant with the glossy finish MSI applied.

(Credit: Mark Stetson)

We’ve seen a handful of side-panel screens over the years in exotic towers and mods, but big screens are less common, still, on the front of the system. Your desk layout will have to be arranged just the right way for you to see the screen clearly, but if you can make it work, there are several potential use cases. You can use the screen in the obvious ways as a second monitor, extended from your Windows desktop. Or you can use software to deploy a cool touch UI, placing app shortcuts there, displaying hardware monitoring data, or otherwise customizing it to your liking.

(Credit: Mark Stetson)

The "AI" in the name of the system hints at the NPU-equipped Arrow Lake CPU inside, but it's also a sop to the AI functionality of this system. It's equipped with an integrated mic, and you can give your system commands and request functions (say, to open a certain control panel or tweak a certain setting) and have the front panel reflect your wishes.

(Credit: Mark Stetson)

'Arrow Lake S' Computation, and Project Zero Inspiration

The glorious front panel is clearly the main attraction of the Vision X, but it's not the only feature of note. Inside, you’ll find Intel’s Arrow Lake 200S processors—running up to the Core Ultra 9 285K chip and Nvidia graphics. (At the time we looked at the machine, it was running a GeForce RTX 40-series graphics card, but RTX 50 series will be in the offing by the time this PC launches.)

(Credit: Mark Stetson)

Also of interest is the proprietary motherboard, which MSI designed, inspired by its Project Zero initiative. The Project Zero ecosystem, which debuted at last Computex, features boards and PC-case layouts designed to hide and minimize as many cables and connectors as possible. The aim is to deliver a clean final look for your PC's interior, particularly where towers have a large clear side window like this one. MSI tells us this is not technically a Project Zero-compliant board (it doesn't comply with a standard form factor), but it’s designed with similar intentions for this case.

(Credit: Mark Stetson)

Otherwise, the Vision X AI 2nd is the high-end gaming PC you would expect, with liquid CPU cooling, support for multiple SSDs, Wi-Fi 7, and some flashy system lighting. The design includes independent air chambers and SSD temperature monitoring.

(Credit: Mark Stetson)

As you may have been starting to suspect, none of this will come cheap. MSI is still nailing down the final details, since it’s set to launch in Q2. Still, the representatives provided us with a rough estimate of $4,000-plus for fully loaded versions of this tower, depending on the exact configuration.

(Credit: Mark Stetson)

When units become available for review, we’ll circle back with far more hands-on time and testing. For now, start thinking of the best uses for that built-in second screen--and where you'll put the Vision X to maximize the view.

About Our Experts

Matthew Buzzi

Matthew Buzzi

Principal Writer, Hardware

My Experience

I’ve been a consumer PC expert at PCMag for 10 years, and I love PC gaming. I've played games on my computer for as long as I can remember, which eventually (as it does for many) led me to build and upgrade my own desktops to this day. Through my years at PCMag, I've tested and reviewed many, many dozens of laptops and desktops, and I am always happy to recommend a PC for your needs and budget.

The Technology I Use

The single piece of technology I use the most (by far!) is my self-built desktop. I spend a lot of my time gaming (and now, working) on this system, and I’m likely to continue upgrading it in some form forever. As it relates to my work at PCMag, it’s a vital window into keeping up to date with components, performance, and the latest titles. On the smartphone front, I’m a full-time Android user.

I’m always eyeing my next GPU upgrade, but the consistent part of my gaming setup has been a 165Hz 1440p monitor; I think this remains the sweet spot for the time being. A dual-monitor setup has been essential for work and play; my second screen is either a productivity monitor, playing videos for entertainment, or being used for console gaming, depending on the time of day.

Speaking of which, I may be primarily a PC gamer, but (like any good gaming enthusiast without enough discipline) I also own a PlayStation 5, an Xbox Series S, a Steam Deck, and a Nintendo Switch 2. The PS5 and Xbox are hooked up to a living-room television for a more laid-back couch experience; I've found Gamepass to be especially handy for cooperative play and for taking my saved-game files from my desk to my couch through the cloud.

Read full bio

John Burek

John Burek

Executive Editor and PC Labs Director

My Experience

I have been a technology journalist for almost 30 years and have covered just about every kind of computer gear—from the 386SX to 64-core processors—in my long tenure as an editor, a writer, and an advice columnist. For almost a quarter-century, I worked on the seminal, gigantic Computer Shopper magazine (and later, its digital counterpart), aka the phone book for PC buyers, and the nemesis of every postal delivery person. I was Computer Shopper's editor in chief for its final nine years, after which much of its digital content was folded into PCMag.com. I also served, briefly, as the editor in chief of the well-known hard-core tech site Tom's Hardware.

During that time, I've built and torn down enough desktop PCs to equip a city block's worth of internet cafes. Under race conditions, I've built PCs from bare-board to bootup in under 5 minutes. I never met a screwdriver I didn't like.

I was also a copy chief and a fact checker early in my career. (Editing and polishing technical content to make it palatable for consumer audiences is my forte.) I also worked as an editor of scholarly science books, and as an editor of "Dummies"-style computer guidebooks for Brady Books (now, BradyGames). I'm a lifetime New Yorker, a graduate of New York University's journalism program, and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.

The Technology I Use

I use a lot of computers on rotation in my daily work, but I rely on just a few to get things done. I split my work life mostly between a Microsoft Surface Laptop 3 (a 15-inch Ryzen model), paired with a Lenovo ThinkVision portable monitor, and a custom-built big-chassis Windows 10 desktop PC that has served me well for years now. (Specs: Liquid-cooled Intel Core i7-6950X Extreme Edition, 32GB of RAM, and a GeForce GTX 1080 card.) That's all in a giant chassis with six hard drives and SSDs packing its bays. (As I upgrade systems, I just keep moving the old warhorse drives over.) This behemoth is hooked up to a 32-inch LG monitor.

I also have a bunch of PCs around the house, all custom builds: another one attached to my main TV (for gaming and occasional forays into VR), a mini-PC on the bedroom TV (acting as a media server), and a Mini-ITX desktop in a corner of the living room...just because. I carry around an oversize OnePlus phone, but when I do long-haul travel, a vintage iPod Touch comes along, too, for old times' sake.

I wasn't always a PC guy. I cut my teeth on a cassette-drive-equipped Commodore VIC-20 in the 1980s. But I got serious with Apple desktops in the early 1990s, starting with a Macintosh SE, then a Macintosh LC, and finally one of the short-lived Umax "clone" Macs, before building my first PC and never looking back.

With all my typing and editing work over the years, I've become a huge proponent of thumb trackballs, which minimize wrist action (and my wrist pain). I have a secret cache of the long-discontinued Microsoft Trackball Optical Mouse (my personal favorite), held in an undisclosed location.

Read full bio