Super Flower Leadex VII 1200W Platinum Pro
1200W 80+ Platinum, full-modular, no native 12VHPWR - adapter required for RTX 40-series.
Official India stock. Full warranty through the brand's India service network, standard RMA if anything goes wrong.
Full specs
Where to buy Super Flower Leadex VII 1200W Platinum Pro in India
Expect to pay roughly ₹18,500-20,500 for the Super Flower Leadex VII 1200W Platinum Pro in India right now, depending on offers and seller. I always recommend buying from retailers that give a proper GST invoice - it's what makes your India warranty claim smooth later.
In my years running a PC store, PrimeABGB (Mumbai) and Vedant Computers (Kolkata) have also been consistently reliable for verified stock - compare before buying.
Super Flower Leadex VII 1200W Platinum Pro India Price and Review
Where This Fits
1200W is the sweet spot for single-GPU flagship builds. It's more than an RTX 5080 needs at stock, comfortable for an RTX 5080 with a solid overclock, and right in the zone for an RTX 5090 build that isn't chasing extreme multi-GPU or HEDT power draw. If you've read our Leadex Platinum 2000W piece, think of the Leadex VII as the "I actually need this much power and not more" version of that flagship.
Super Flower gets the same brief introduction here as in our other Leadex coverage: it's a Taiwanese PSU OEM that's been building power supplies since 1981, and it's the actual manufacturer behind a fair number of PSUs sold under other, more recognizable brand names. Buying the Leadex VII means buying the reference design directly rather than a rebadge, which is the enthusiast case for the brand even if it's new to Indian retail shelves under its own name.
Specs That Matter
80+ Platinum certification puts efficiency at roughly 90-92% across typical loads — a meaningful step up from Gold-tier units in the same wattage bracket, and enough to matter if this PSU is running near 60-70% load regularly (a realistic scenario for a single high-end GPU build). "Pro" in the naming typically signals Super Flower's higher-spec cable and connector set within the Leadex VII line, plus fully modular cabling so you're not routing unused PCIe or SATA cables through your case.
ATX 3.1 and PCIe 5.1 support means this unit is built for the transient power spike behavior of current flagship GPUs rather than working around it with an adapter — relevant if you're pairing this with an RTX 5090 or RTX 5080 that draws momentary spikes well above rated TDP.
The interesting part: at roughly the same price as Corsair's Gold-tier RM1200e and ASUS's Gold-tier TUF Gaming 1200W, the Leadex VII gets you a full efficiency tier higher (Platinum vs Gold) for essentially no price premium. That's a genuinely strong value position if the price parity holds at your local retailer.
India Context
Indian mains power isn't always clean, and PSUs running near their rated capacity for long gaming or render sessions are more exposed to voltage sag and brownout stress than idle systems. Platinum-tier units generally use better internal components and tighter regulation than Gold-tier units at the same price, which is one more reason the Leadex VII's positioning is appealing here specifically. Full protection suite (OVP/UVP/OCP/OTP/SCP) is standard at this tier and matters more in India's grid conditions than in a lab test bench.
Who Should Buy / Who Should Skip
Buy this if: you're building a single RTX 5080 or RTX 5090 rig and want Platinum efficiency at a price that matches Gold-tier competitors. It's also a sensible choice if you want headroom for a moderate overclock without stepping up to a 1550W+ Titanium unit.
Skip this if: you're on a mainstream build (RTX 5070-class or below) — you don't need 1200W and would be better served by Thermaltake's Toughpower GF A3 1050W Gold or something in the 650-850W range instead. If you need genuine multi-GPU or extreme HEDT headroom, go up to the Leadex Platinum 2000W.
Questions
Yes, comfortably, for a single-GPU build with a high-end CPU, even with a moderate overclock. You'd only need more if you're running dual GPUs or an extreme HEDT platform alongside it.
It's new to Indian retail visibility under its own name but it's a long-established OEM (since 1981) that manufactures internals for several other PSU brands. The Leadex VII is a legitimate mid-to-high-tier unit, not an unknown quantity engineering-wise.
At near-identical Indian pricing, the Leadex VII's Platinum certification beats the RM1200e's Gold tier on paper efficiency. Corsair has a longer service-network track record in India, which is worth factoring if brand-name support matters more to you than the efficiency tier.