
Our Verdict
Pros
- Large 148mm FDB fan
- Cybenetics Gold rated
- Aggressively priced
- Premium Japanese capacitors
- 10-year warranty
Cons
- Proprietary fan size
- Lesser-known OEM
Should you buy it?
AvoidConsiderShortlistBuyIntroduction, Specifications, and Pricing
Moaiplay is new to PC components and aims to be a go-to brand for gamers and enthusiasts seeking modern design and aggressive pricing. This approach is similar to another brand that starts with "M" and has the same mantra. Moaiplay sent over their Ora Pro G1 850W ATX 3.1 PSU for us to review. Two other models - the 750W ($109.99) and the 1000W ($139.99) - address lower- and higher-wattage needs. The Ora Pro G1 850W has an MSRP of $119.99 and is Cybenetics Gold-rated, with a 10-year warranty.
Let's get down to the point and see how the Ora Pro G1 850W ATX 3.1 PSU is made and how it performs under stress. Let's go.
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Model | Moaiplay Ora Pro G1 850W ATX 3.1 PSU |
| Form Factor | ATX |
| Dimensions | 150x152x86 mm |
| Color | Black |
| ATX12V Version | ATX12V V3.1 |
| Fan | FDB fan, 148mm |
| Protections | OCP, OVP, UVP, OPP, OTP, SCP, SIP, NLO |
| Capacitor Type | 2x Nippon Chemi-Con 330µF at 420V |
| AC Input | 100 - 240 V / 13.5 - 6.5A |
| Efficiency | Cybenetics Gold |
| Warranty | 10 Years |

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* Prices last scanned 6/9/2026 at 7:32 pm CDT - prices may be inaccurate. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. We earn affiliate commission from any Newegg or PCCG sales. | ||||
Packaging

The exterior packaging of the Moaiplay Ora Pro G1 850W is purple, with the product image on the right-hand side. Also, all the certifications the Ora Pro G1 has earned are listed at the bottom.

The exterior packaging shows all power specifications and the included cables.

The back of the packaging highlights additional key features that Moaiplay is focusing on, with special attention to the 148mm FDB fan used for cooling.

Sandwiched between two pieces of open-cell foam and wrapped in a protective plastic bag, the Ora Pro G1 is protected from any debris or damage that might occur during shipping.
Our Latest 80 PLUS Gold PSUs Review Coverage

Moaiplay has placed all the modular cabling inside this branded cloth bag.

Also included is a C13 power cable, zip ties, cable straps, and the Product Safety and Standards leaflet.

Removing the cables from the cloth bag that Moaiplay has included, which are all individually sleeved.
Included cables:
- 20+4 Pin Motherboard cable (600mm)
- 12V 4+4 Pin CPU cables (2, 700mm)
- 12V-2x6 Pin VGA cable (600mm
- PCIe 6+2 Pin cable (3, 600mm)
- 4x SATA cable (450-150-150-150mm)
- 2x SATA + 2x PATA cable (2, 450-150-150mm)
Outside the Moaiplay Ora Pro G1 850 ATX 3.1 PSU

Looking at the outside of the Ora G1 Pro, we can see the large grille for the 148mm intake fan, which has very minimal airflow restriction.

On the business side of the Ora G1 Pro, all cable input connections lean heavily to the right. This makes it easier to install cables while the PSU is inside a chassis. The top section is for either CPU or PCIe connections. The middle section holds the 12V-2x6 GPU connection and four 6-pin connections. At the bottom, there is a single CPU or PCIe 8-pin connection, followed by two motherboard connections for the 24-pin cable. Moaiplay's branding is in the upper-left corner.

A large nomenclature sticker spanning the entire back of the PSU unit lists voltage and wattage.

On the power input side, we see a power rocker switch, a power input, and a Zero Fan on/off switch. Mesh is also around all the necessary places to ensure air can escape easily.

And rounding out the exterior of the Ora Pro G1, we see branding on the side and a design stamped on the top edge.
Inside the Moaiplay Ora Pro G1 850 ATX 3.1 PSU

Inside the Ora Pro G1 is the 148mm fan, a conspicuous feature highlighted by Moaiplay. The fan design is reminiscent of that of other power supplies.

After removing the fan with four screws, I saw why it seemed familiar. The OEM is Yate Loon, model D140SM-12, followed by L-148. This fan is a variant of the 140mm version. It delivers high airflow with quiet acoustics and is mostly used in Moaiplay's OEM PSUs. Its rated airflow is 62 CFM at 1400 RPM, with a 0.70 amp draw. Because this fan is slightly larger, you cannot swap it with a standard 140mm fan - the mounting holes are farther apart.

With the fan removed, a top-down view reveals the OEM is SANR, less well-known than FSP, SuperFlower, Lite-On, or CWT. The layout is simple but well constructed. With a Cybenetics Efficiency Gold rating and an A+ noise rating, this unit performs well.

The dual main capacitors from Nippon Chemi-Con are rated at 420V and 330 microfarads each, for a grand total of 660 microfarads. Both capacitors are rated for up to 105 °C for operating temperature.

Again, the supporting secondary filtering capacitors from Nippon Chemi-Con and Rubycon are rated at 3300 microfarads at 16V. Again, these capacitors are rated for use up to 105 °C.

The main transformer features a basic design that performs adequately.
Installation, Testing, Finished Product, and Final Thoughts
Ryan's Test System Specifications
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Motherboard | GIGABYTE X870E AORUS Pro (Buy at Amazon) |
| CPU | AMD Ryzen 9 7950X (Buy at Amazon) |
| RAM | Corsair DOMINATOR® PLATINUM RGB 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5 DRAM 7200MT/s CL34 (Buy at Corsair) |
| GPU | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 FE (Buy at Amazon) |
| Display | Sceptre 34-Inch Curved Ultrawide WQHD Monitor 3440 x 1440 R1500 165Hz (Buy at Amazon) |
| SSD | Corsair MP600 Pro XT 2TB (Buy at Amazon) |
| CPU Cooler | Corsair iCUE Titan 360 RX CPU Cooler (Buy at Amazon) |
| Case | Corsair Air 5400 LX-R Triple Chamber ATX Case (Buy at Amazon) |
| OS | Microsoft Windows 11 Pro (Buy at Amazon) |

On the PSU test bench, the CPU is an AMD Ryzen 9 7950X (16 cores, 32 threads) set to 1.32V vCore to keep core speeds above 5GHz. The Ryzen 9 7950X stayed above 5GHz during testing. Wattage peaked at 217 watts and averaged 211 watts. The AM5 motherboard is the X870E AORUS Pro from GIGABYTE (AM5 is the CPU socket type). The test RAM is Corsair Dominator Platinum RGB, which runs at DDR5-7200M/t (DDR5: latest memory, 7200: speed in megatransfers per second)
The NVIDIA RTX 3090 FE test GPU was power-limited at 30% using the NVIDIA App to manage wattage. The RTX 3090 FE averaged 104 watts and peaked at 106 watts. The rest of the system used about 85 watts. Total power from the wall - measured with a Killawatt P3 electrical monitor - ranged from 419 to 430 watts during the test. On average, 424 watts were drawn from the Moairplay Ora Pro G1 850W ATX 3.1 PSU. The 420 system watts from the 424 average wall watts equate to 94.3% efficiency at 50% load. This exceeds the Cybenetics Platinum certification - a very nice result.
All testing was completed using Aida64 Engineer's System Dependability Test version v8.20.8100 for over 30 hours; the ambient temperature was 18 °C. Other monitoring software used was HWiNFO64 v8.40-5900, TechPowerUp GPU-Z v2.69.0, and CPU-Z 2.18.0.x64.
For a relatively new brand striving to disrupt the PC component market, Moaiplay makes an incredibly strong impression with the Ora Pro G1 850W ATX 3.1 PSU. Priced aggressively at $119.99, it undercuts much of the established competition while refusing to cut corners where it matters most.
Under the hood, the choice of a less-known OEM like SANR might initially raise eyebrows, but the layout is clean, and the dependence on premium, 105°C-rated Nippon Chemi-Con Japanese capacitors speaks to its build quality. In real-life stress testing, the unit punched well above its weight class. While officially certified as Cybenetics Gold, our 50% load test pulled an average of 424 watts from the wall, with a total system draw of 420 watts, for a staggering 94.3% efficiency - clearing the bar for Platinum territory.
Cooling and acoustics are handled beautifully by the custom 148mm Yate Loon FDB fan, which kept the unit quiet even during a brutal 30-hour stability test. The only minor caveat is that the non-standard 148mm fan size eliminates any chance of DIY fan replacements down the road. However, given the premium individually sleeved cables, a strong feature set, and a massive 10-year warranty, the Moaiplay Ora Pro G1 850W is an absolute steal for gamers and aficionados wanting modern ATX 3.1 power on a budget.




