ASRock's own website now carries a notice that reads: "The Taichi 10th Anniversary products are concept products created to celebrate the milestone. There are currently no plans for retail sale." That's a sentence that raises more questions than it answers.
Here's the thing: ASRock debuted the Taichi sub-brand back in 2016, and to mark 10 years, the company put together a full lineup of anniversary hardware. The centerpiece was an RX 9070 XT graphics card dressed in Taichi's signature aesthetic, joined by two motherboards, an AIO cooler with a hologram display panel on the front, and a gaming monitor. The whole thing appeared at Computex just weeks ago. Looked real. Looked finished. Looked like something you'd absolutely want to buy.
Then ASRock confirmed none of it is coming to market.

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What actually got unveiled (and then immediately shelved)
The full Taichi 10th Anniversary lineup was more than a single GPU tease. The spread included:
- An RX 9070 XT graphics card with Taichi-branded styling
- Two motherboard variants
- An AIO cooler featuring a front-panel hologram display
- A matching gaming monitor
None of these designs look like wild concept art you'd expect from a pure design exercise. The GPU and motherboards especially read like production-ready SKUs. The AIO cooler is the one outlier, since a hologram display unit raises legitimate questions about how it would function in a real thermal environment, but the rest of the lineup? Completely ordinary by today's premium PC hardware standards.
The gap between Computex flex and actual product
PC hardware anniversaries are common. Asus ROG just celebrated its 20th birthday at Computex with actual products you can buy. The Taichi 10th Anniversary reveal followed a very different playbook: generate attention, build desire, then clarify that none of it was ever intended for your shopping cart.
What most players miss is that this kind of deliberate vaporware does serve a purpose, even if it feels frustrating. It signals brand ambition, reinforces design identity, and generates press coverage without the cost of tooling up a full production run. The Taichi sub-brand gets a visibility boost heading into its second decade, and ASRock gets to show what the line could look like at its most premium.
The cynical read is that it's a way to test market appetite without committing. If the response to the Taichi 10th Anniversary lineup had been overwhelming, the calculus on a limited production run might have shifted.
So where does this leave Taichi fans?
The Taichi line does have real products available right now. ASRock sells Taichi-branded motherboards and has released standard RX 9070 XT variants under other product lines. The anniversary hardware was never the only path to Taichi-branded components; it was just the most visually striking version of them that will never exist outside a trade show floor.
The key here is that PC hardware enthusiasts who were genuinely excited about that hologram AIO cooler or the anniversary GPU design are now stuck waiting to see if ASRock ever revisits these concepts for an actual release. The company hasn't ruled out future products inspired by the anniversary lineup; it just confirmed the specific Computex versions won't ship.
Whether ASRock eventually turns any of these concepts into real hardware will depend on how much noise the community makes. For now, the Taichi 10th Anniversary lineup exists only as a very polished reminder of what could have been. If you want to stay across the latest PC hardware news and what's actually worth buying, our gaming guides hub overs gear and gaming releases worth your time.







