
MSI MAG A750GL PCIE5
750W 80+ Gold, full-modular, native 12VHPWR.
Native 12VHPWR (PCIe 5.0 ready). 10-year warranty is rare at this price. Best 750W Gold PSU under ₹11K right now.
Official India stock. Full warranty through the brand's India service network, standard RMA if anything goes wrong.
Full specs
GPUs this PSU can power
MSI MAG A750GL Review India — 750W 80+ Gold ATX 3.0 PSU for RTX 4070 Ti Super Builds
MSI MAG A750GL — A Solid 750W ATX 3.0 PSU That Does Not Demand Your Attention
A good PSU is one you never think about after installation. The MSI MAG A750GL earns that description. It is not the cheapest 750W Gold PSU in India, and it is not the most premium. It sits in the middle of the market with solid construction, ATX 3.0 compliance for PCIe 5.0 compatibility, and a 10-year warranty that outpaces most of its competitors at this price.
Why 750W Is the Right Call for Most Builds
I see a lot of Indian builders default to 850W or 1000W "just to be safe." At ₹7,500–10,000 for a quality 750W unit, the math changes — a quality 750W PSU handles nearly every single-GPU gaming build sold in India today.
The RTX 4070 Ti Super draws a maximum of around 285W. An i7-14700K at full tilt draws around 125–180W depending on power limits. Together with the rest of the system (drives, fans, memory), peak system draw is around 500–520W. A 750W PSU handles that with 230W of headroom — comfortable for transient spikes and future-proofing against slight power creep.
RTX 4080 builds are similar — the 4080 draws up to 320W, system total around 560–580W peak. 750W covers it with 170W margin.
Where 750W starts to feel tight is an RTX 4090 build — that GPU alone can spike to 480W. For RTX 4090, I recommend 850W minimum.
ATX 3.0 — Why It Matters for PCIe 5.0 GPUs
ATX 3.0 certification means the PSU is rated to handle instantaneous power spikes up to 3x the connector's rated wattage. For a PCIe 5.0 GPU using the 16-pin 600W connector, that means the PSU must handle 1800W transient peaks on that single connector — briefly, for microseconds. Older ATX 2.x PSUs without this rating can trip their overcurrent protection during these spikes, causing unexpected shutdowns.
The MAG A750GL is ATX 3.0 certified. Future RTX 50-series or RX 8000 series GPUs will not cause issues here.
India Pricing and Availability
At ₹7,500–10,000, the MAG A750GL competes with the Corsair CV750 (₹6,500–8,000, non-modular, not ATX 3.0), the Seasonic Focus GX-750 (₹10,000–13,000), and the Cooler Master MWE Gold 750 V2 (₹7,500–9,000, older ATX 2.x standard).
For ATX 3.0 compliance, fully modular cables, and 10-year warranty at this price, the A750GL is competitive. MDComputers and PrimeABGB stock it — check both for pricing on the day you buy, as MSI PSU prices fluctuate with import batches through Rashi Peripherals.
10-Year Warranty — Is It Real?
MSI's 10-year warranty on the MAG A750GL is genuine and registered through Rashi Peripherals in India. Registration requires your invoice and serial number on the MSI India warranty portal. Claim process is through MSI India's service centers. Turnaround in metro cities is 3–4 weeks based on recent reports. Keep your invoice.
Who Should Buy the MAG A750GL
Builders pairing an RTX 4070 Super, 4070 Ti Super, or RTX 4080 with a mid-to-high-end Intel or AMD CPU. Anyone who wants ATX 3.0 compliance without paying flagship PSU prices. MSI ecosystem builders who prefer brand consistency across components.
Who Should Skip It
RTX 4090 builders — go to 850W. Budget builders whose GPU is an RTX 4060 Ti or below — a non-modular 650W Gold PSU at ₹8,199–6,500 handles those builds fine. The MAG A750GL is slightly over-specified for sub-₹1L gaming rigs.
Questions
Yes — MSI includes the 16-pin (12VHPWR) cable in the box. No adapter needed.
For most mid-tower ATX builds, yes. The flexibility to remove unused cables reduces clutter significantly. The A750GL's flat cables make routing through tight spots easier than older braided cables.
The Seasonic Focus GX-750 has slightly better ripple suppression at load, but costs ₹2,000–4,000 more in India. For a gaming build, the A750GL is the better value. For a workstation running 18+ hours daily, the Seasonic's build quality justifies the premium.