MSI has never shied away from showing off, but its latest creation may just be the most visually striking enclosure I’ve ever laid eyes on. Enter MEG Maestro 900L PZ, a flagship chassis first unveiled at CES 2025 and making a grand old entrance at Computex 2025 by blending tempered glass, curved aluminium, soft gold grillework, and pre-installed liquid cooling into one supremely premium showcase system.
Seen running on the show floor, Maestro 900L wasn’t just an empty shell. MSI populated the rather spacious rig with a vertical GeForce RTX 5080 Suprim GPU, MEG CoreLiquid E13 360 AIO cooler, dual side screens, and tasteful RGB accents illuminating the chamber from top to base. This isn’t a prototype, either, but rather unmistakable statement: this is what MSI thinks boutique PCs should look like.



From the outside, it’s a feast for the eyes. The panoramic glass side panels let you peer into every component with zero obstruction. The raised, forward-sweeping base gives it a floating appearance, while the brushed metal roofline, capped by a gold-vented grille, reinforces its luxury ambitions. Around the back, the PSU and cabling are entirely hidden, channelled through a discrete second chamber that keeps the spotlight firmly on the showpiece internals.
With MEG CoreLiquid E13 360 pre-installed as part of the demo, you’re treated to a six-inch rotatable LCD, letting users display system stats, media, or animated artwork.



In fact, chucking in two MSI Vision Lite 12 LCD panels flanking either side of the appropriately luxurious MEG X870E Godlike motherboard, and this rig has more displays than my entire setup.
I’d go as far as to say you need these to fill the gargantuan case, lest you leave the components dwarfed by the sheer space to hand. Just look at how small RTX 5090 looks. Of course, you can put whatever you want in here and it’ll look good. There’s space for a 420mm radiator at the top and bottom, but the Lucky-topped CoreLiquid A13 360 or the space-age CoreLiquid P13 360 will look a treat.



Fortunately, it’s not all for show. Maestro 900L packs a good deal of versatility with a removeable motherboard tray. You have your pick of one of four different configurations, giving you the ability to prioritise a set-and-forget spotlight piece or accessibility to swap parts in or out.
You’ll be able to get your hands on a standalone MSI MEG Maestro 900L at some point in Q4 2025, which is just enough time to get saving. After all, this premium chassis will set you back $599 without a single additional component. But if the reaction on the Computex floor is anything to go by, there’s clear appetite for a PC case that puts artistry on equal footing with airflow, making it worth the extra.
This is the tip of the iceberg this event, as the MSI booth is chock-full of goodies this Computex. There are graphics cards, motherboards, tiny PCs, and my favourite, the Clair Obscur-like STRIKE keyboard. You can keep up to date by following Club386 on Google News.