Nope. There wasn't for the Cerberus X and that doesn't seem to be changing for this case. It just means you have to be smart with your cable management.
If you're using a 160mm air cooler (reasonable choice if you want to save money, D15 is on par with 240mm aio and more reliable while being a bit cheaper, FUMA II if you're on a tighter budget), you pretty much have to use SFX. If you are using an AIO with a psu mounted above the cpu socket, you can use ATX no problem. There is a valid concern about how the hell you're going to connect the shorter EPS cable on a bottom mounted SFX psu to the top left of the board where most EPS connectors are while not just routing it over everything like a dummy (both Silverstone and Corsair have 400mm EPS cables, I already have trouble with stock EPS cable being a bit short on a Cerberus X with an SFX psu and that only has to travel around 300mm), but that can be fixed with aftermarket cables.
Hate to say this, but stuffing is only applicable if you really have an excess of cables (I do, my fault for trying to fit Corsair ML120 RGB fans complete with the rat's nest of cables that it comes with, plus two SATA devices, plus two Phanteks Halos RGB rings) or if you're too lazy to manage them (also me). It all comes down to component choices. RGB fans add wires everywhere. Period. Avoid like the plague if you don't want to spend hours trying to hide them. Storage is an area where you can remove cable clutter. While you cannot avoid having SATA data and power cables with a spinning hard drive, you can absolutely avoid cables with SSDs. Most motherboards come with at least one M.2 slot, with two or more being common on X570 or HEDT platforms. Most of them support both SATA and NVMe (do check motherboard manual). For SSDs on the cheap, my personal recommendation is the Crucial MX500 1TB SATA M.2 ssd at $100-110. SATA is fast enough for most people and cheap enough to justify over trying to cram a 2TB HDD into a system, plus Crucial does have a good reputation (they're basically Micron after all). It doesn't get much better than that. NVMe does add a bit of cost, but prices aren't too outlandish unless you're trying to buy something like a 970 Evo. If all else fails, aftermarket cables are the best solution. You can either get cheaper options from ModDIY, average priced options like Cablemod, or the more boutique and expensive options like Pslate.
If all else fails, no one will judge you for getting a solid side panel which doesn't allow visibility into the case. Really the only time that you need to obsessively manage cables is if you're using a tempered glass panel which this does have, or if the cables block airflow.