The Antec Basiq is a double forward unit with the +12V and +5V group regulated (averaged value) with the +3.3V using separate feedback. This is considered a barebones, somewhat dated topology by today's standards. It has a limitation in that the +12V and +5V must both be loaded by about the same % of their total rated capacity, or else the averaged regulation fails and you get out of spec voltage. For instance, with 20A on the +12V and 1A on the +5V you may see +11.65V and +5.25V outputs. With 20A on the +12V and 0.1A on the +5V you may see +11.45V and +5.35V outputs, which by the way are still inside that unit's OVP/UVP protection limits. I'm just guessing on those load/voltage figures, but they're typical for similar units. It's not a great PSU anyway, intended largely for the "my PSU just died and I need to buy a replacement at the store today" market.
Modern high-end units will use a double forward, LLC resonant half bridge, or ZVS half bridge or full bridge topology with a single +12V transformer output, with the +5V and +3.3V rails buck regulated from that output. These are generally much better suited for general purpose electronics work than older or cheaper units.