Where are you getting that math from? Let's see:
CPU: 170W sustained, let's say 300W with an OC.
2x PCIe x16: 150W
4x USB-C: 60W (4x15W)
8x USB-A: 80W
5x m.2: 50W
Fans, RAM, various controllers and other stuff: let's say 50W.
That sums up to 690W without the >75W power of the GPU - but, crucially, assumes
every single component and port is loaded to 100% power draw at once. With a very power hungry OC. That never, ever happens in a PC. Ever. And, of course, dual GPU is dead, so that 2x75W for PCIe x16 is completely unrealistic (
very few non-GPU AICs draw 75W). Nor will you ever fully load five SSDs at once, or draw full power from every USB port at once. It just isn't happening.
Is total power creeping up from these faster interfaces, and is
potential total power creeping up from more power outputs? Sure! Does that matter? Not much. A baseline build will still draw 250-300W under normal loads; an upper midrange build will still draw 400-500W under normal loads (with each of these peaking at 25-50% higher under unrealistic torture loads).
Also, crucially, most boards with more than one EPS connector don't actually need more than one to be connected. A single EPS cable is rated for 336W after all. The extras are for XOC or to look cool.
USB hosts generally support 5v3A or 15W. There are exceptions, but they are rare. Also, who on earth charges their phone from a rear USB port?
Most fast-charging smartphones also don't support their peak rating with PD, but use some proprietary fast charging and step down significantly when on PD.
This board is pretty insane though. Outside of people using tons of AICs, I can't think of anything it doesn't have in spades. Looking forward to the >$1000 price tag!