Phison is demonstrating the capabilities of its upcoming flagship E28 PCIe 5.0 controller atComputex 2025, where it appears to excel over its rivals. The E28 thrashes competitors like Samsung’s fastest9100 Proofferings in random reads and writes, achieving parity in sequential reads and delivering impressive efficiency numbers.

Building on itsCES 2025unveiling, the E28 is now roaring to life, driving a reference platform. The Phison E28 serves as the company’s long-awaited successor to theE26, which for a long while was hailed as the fastest PCIe 5.0 offering, eventually surpassed bySiliconMotion’s SM2508andSamsung’s Presto. The E28 is fabbed using TSCM’s 6nm process, compared to the 12 nm-based E26, while supporting upwards of 32TB of TLC flash along with robust error correction technologies like LPDC and RAID ECC. It supports an eight-channel layout at 4200 MT/s along with AES-256, TCG Opal, and Pyrite encryption capabilities.

PS5028-E28 Showcase

Phison advertises the E28 with 14.8 GB/s and 14 GB/s sequential read and write speeds, only second toSanDisk’s WD SN8100. The E28 truly excels in random I/O, thrashing all competition with remarkable read and write IOPS of 2,600K and 3,000K, respectively. This effectively dethrones Samsung’s Presto-powered 9100 Pro by 400 IOPS across each department. The E28 is touted by Phison as the first controller to feature integrated AI processing, which supposedly makes future SSDs powered by these controllers a great fit for accelerating AI/ML workloads and the like.

In some images we managed to grab, the Phison E28 reference platform almost breaches the 15 GB/s barrier, powering a Ryzen 7 9700X and Asus ROG Crosshair X870E equipped system. Phison claims 15% lower power consumption versus competing 6nm-based alternatives. In sustained workloads, when equipped with the MSI Raider GE78 HX 14VGG with the i9-14900HX, the controller’s average power draw peaked at 7.46W, a notable improvement over the E26.

PS5028-E28 Specifications

The figures also check out with exclusivebenchmarks of the E28 we shared previously.

TBW (for 4TB variant)

Phison E28 Almost Breaching 15 GB/s

2,400TB

4,000TB

Phison E28 Efficiency

14.8 GB/s

14.9 GB/s

Hassam Nasir

14.5 GB/s

14 GB/s

14.0 GB/s

13.4 GB/s

12.7 GB/s

2,600K

1,800K

Phison reports that the E28’s initial production run has been successful, and the company is now moving to mass production. Consumer SSDs powered by this controller should arrive by the latter half of the year, though this timeline might stretch into 2026.

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Hassam Nasir is a die-hard hardware enthusiast with years of experience as a tech editor and writer, focusing on detailed CPU comparisons and general hardware news. When he’s not working, you’ll find him bending tubes for his ever-evolving custom water-loop gaming rig or benchmarking the latest CPUs and GPUs just for fun.