A halo tier flagship motherboard should be drooled-over by many and owned by few. There's no doubt that this is one of the most extreme X870E options on the market, featuring unique approaches to expansion and support for sub-ambient overclocking. But does it do enough justify the price tag?
With Intel dishing out price cuts and performance boosts left and right, Arrow Lake is starting to look attractive, at least at certain price points. If you want an overclocking motherboard with solid specifications and attractive aesthetics, then ASRock might just have the product for you.
With a solid EFI, overclocking support, plenty of SSD and VRM cooling and dual Thunderbolt 4 ports for less than $300, does this attractive white board have what's needed to offer a premium home for your Arrow Lake CPU?
MSI is going all-out with Mini-ITX support for mid and high-end chipsets from both AMD and Intel. We're starting with the B860 model, in dazzling titanium attire featuring Thunderbolt 4, but can it edge out some stiff competition at $220?
If you want the benefits of X870E on AMD's Socket AM5 platform, then the MSI X870E Tomahawk is one of the cheapest options around. But what does it offer over X870 and B850 boards, especially those that cost a fair bit less?
If you want a capable Socket AM5 motherboard and have a $200 budget, some features inevitably get culled, so the question is whether what's left is enough for your average PC user. Thankfully, you won't find much better than the Steel Legend in terms of balancing price and features.
The ASUS ROG Maximus Z890 Hero is dripping with features and an edgy, head-turning design, but for once the fault lays not with the board or manufacturer, but with the lack of attractive CPU options, although as usual this high-end ASUS board is still prohibitively expensive for most.