Many amps/receivers will power ML speakers just fine. Most people use at most maybe 40 watts per speaker on peaks. I have made some comments lately that referred to the high end gear. My comments were out of date in reference to current gear. But in talking about this we have talked (Chops, Twitter and myself) about the expensive stuff. For guys that want top tier stuff the spec is to double down at 4 ohms. Those units will power most anything as the manufacturer built them to be able to easily work with 4 ohm equipment. Very robust power supplies. But, that is NOT needed for everyday listening. You can power an ML speaker with a 75 watt at 8 ohm receiver and it will work fine at normal listening levels of say 95db and lower. But, if you want to really get serious and turn it up that 75 watt per channel unit that does not double at 4 ohms will crap out quick. What do I mean by crap out? It will go into clipping. It is best to have around 4 times the RMS power you normally use so that you don't have peaks that clip all the time. For example, if you are using lets say 10 watts per channel for watching a movie, then you want your unit to easily handle 40 watts per channel. This will allow the unit to give you decent peaks as required by the movie. But it is all a sliding scale. More power is never bad. Too low and you can have clipping which is very bad for good sound and if clipped long enough, hard enough will kill a woofer. Remember also that this power requirement is a general guideline, not written in stone. For example, I have what I can afford. If I could afford a killer separates system, I'd get one. So when we discuss this stuff you have to know if we talking high end where very high performance is the goal, or are we talking about general stuff affordable to the masses? It does cost money to get really superb high end gear. Many on this site have high end gear and have amazing systems. In other words as I'm sure many on here agree that some answers to questions are "It depends".