Phison launches the first ever SSD controller to have built-in AI processing, along with some monstr

By Alex Johnson | December 05, 2025

When it comes to the world of PC gaming, a new SSD controller chip is unlikely to garner many headlines, as it's normally the solid state drives they're used in that are more newsworthy. But at this year's Computex event, SSD specialist Phison announced a new controller that is faster and more power efficient than the competition, and even has integrated AI processing to speed up…well…AI processing.

The controller in question is the rather unassumingly titled E28, and it's already picked up an award at Computex for its innovation. Manufactured on TSMC's N6 process node, Phison says the E28 sports random read/write rates of 2,600K and 3,000K IOPS, respectively.

Computex 2025

The Taipei 101 building and Taipei skyline in Taiwan.

(Image credit: Jacob Ridley)

Catch up with Computex 2025: We're stalking the halls of Taiwan's biggest tech show once again [[link]] to see what Nvidia, AMD, Intel, Asus, Gigabyte, MSI and more have to offer.

As to why the E28 boasts such monstrously high random data rates, it's because the chip is designed to be [[link]] used in AI workloads and even comes with built-in circuitry for accelerating data flows during inference and token processing. Phison goes on to say that the integrated AI acceleration can reduce training times by as much as 50%, which is a pretty remarkable claim.

Of course, the E28 isn't aimed at the general public, least of all PC gaming. It's for mega-expensive, budget-be-damned AI workstations and servers, where the only thing that matters is raw performance.

However, while gaming SSDs are becoming ever faster in terms of sequential read/write bandwidth, they're still surprisingly slow when it comes to random operations.

The difference between the two is that the former involves a stream of continuous data, whereas the latter involves reading or writing data from all over the drive, in a constantly varying pattern.

Random data performance is key to making any PC feel snappy and responsive, as sequential throughput is mostly only helpful for loading a game or a level. The fact that the E28 has a random performance that's up to 240% faster than the current best gaming SSD means that a some point in the near future, ordinary SSDs are going to feel much more responsive.

So while the E28 is going to be the preserve of the professional AI market, its successors and siblings are going to bring all of its random goodness to the everyday world of PCs and gaming. Now that is newsworthy.

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