I’m not exactly jazzed about our current AI moment, where machine learning major players seem to want to inject LLMs into everything. Well, during this year’s Computex, MSI unveiled the MEG Vision X2 AI⁺, a gaming desktop that features “a first-of-its-kind AI Holostage” built in. Excuse me while I attempt to contain my excitement.
In other words, this is a gaming desktop with an AI cyber prison attached to it (no wonder I initially misread this tower’s unique selling point as being an ‘AI hostage’). Taking centre stage inside this gaming desktop will be “LuckyClaw, MSI’s agentic AI companion,” though MSI’s press release suggests “digital companions, desktop pets, and custom third-party AI avatars” may also be available down the line.
MSI’s own agentic AI companion LuckyClaw will be available from first-time setup. “LuckyClaw responds to natural speech commands, enabling seamless, hands-free control of performance profiles, MSI monitor settings, RGB lighting, and more,” MSI claims, “Future skill updates ensure LuckyClaw grows alongside its user, continuously expanding its capabilities over time.”
MSI pitches this unholy union between AI and hardware as redefining “human-computer interaction by transforming the gaming PC from a passive device into a living, interactive presence.” I’m not sure about you, but I’d rather not let an AI anywhere near my rig’s performance settings. I know I’ve joked in the past about making my gaming desktop into a shrine to Miku Hatsune, but the RGB inside my desktop tower is ‘interactive’ enough for me, thanks.
The LuckyClaw avatar looks like a pudgy red dragon with lobster-style gauntlets. This armour could potentially be a nod to OpenClaw, the open-source LLM-based AI agent—though given the recent story about Summer Yue’s own run-in with this particular bot, that association isn’t really selling me on LuckyClaw.
AI-integration aside, details about the MEG Vision X2 AI⁺ as a gaming desktop are thin on the ground. The press release suggests the MEG Vision X2 AI⁺ will ship with an Intel CPU and an Nvidia GeForce RTX GPU, though it doesn’t nail down any specifications beyond that, including the all-important price tag
This announcement really hinges on touting the “cylindrical display interface integrated directly into the chassis,” and the introduction of LuckyClaw; there’s no word yet on a release window for the MEG Vision X2 AI⁺ gaming desktop.
