Hello!!!! how possible you didn't included the Asrock Gaming Nova X870E , for only 349.00 us dollars on Neweeg USA it have everything the other manufacturer charge you for 200 even so 300 dollars more ,The Nova , Taichi Lite and Taichi are the only boards that no compromise at all the x16 speed pcie line , you can install all the ssd nve drivers you want , also have a killer VRM much better than the Asus Hero , black plate, digital post code and so and so for less than 400.00 us dollars
I had to get a new motherboard my x670e tomahawk broke (my GPU release switch broke and my GPU was not seated firmly) so I ordered a MSI x870e carbon it will arrive on the 8th of October. Hope all goes well I have an 7800x3d 7900xtx
@@3rd_PhaseSmith you seem like the type to get the 5090 when u got a 4090, its ur money im just saying you dont need to upgrade cuz you'll get the same results no need to be cringe
I've been rocking a gigabyte ds3h matx since 2018 never had any issues with it until recently when I realized I didn't have enough space to add a WiFi card once I got my 7900gre, few hours ago I ordered the gigabyte x870 $289 with a 25$ discount thanks to thermaltake not including two pcie cables in their sfx psu
Question: What is max no. displays (4K @ 60Hz) which can be connected to these X870/X870E boards, to be driven from iGPU on 9900X? I understand all these boards have 1x HDMI and 2x USB 4 (supporting DP over USB). In principle, each USB 4 port could output to two 4K displays @ 60Hz (using an MST USB-C to dual DP adaptor). So I wonder whether it might be possible to drive FOUR, or even FIVE 4K @ 60Hz displays from the iGPU via X870/X870E Mobo? (of course, another limitation is max no 4K @ 60Hz displays supported by 9900X iGPU itself, I heard this might be a max of FOUR, but unconfirmed?) I am planning new build using Ryzen 9900X and an X870/X870E Mobo. Will not be used for gaming, for productivity only. I won’t install a discrete graphics card, will rely only on integrated graphics. I wonder if the answer is the SAME for all these X870/X870E Mobos, or would some of them allow to connect more 4K displays than others?
Sorry, I have to say this, but almost none of the X870 and X870E boards can be recommended. When you present such motherboards, you should also mention the weaknesses. Most of these boards have serious weaknesses, which especially with the high price, are simply a NO-GO! Please mention the STUPID LANE SHARING of the boards, otherwise this is not a serious presentation. These are certainly not "top choices". Most of the 600 boards are simply better connected and also cheaper too. It's your responsibility to be fair and honest with your viewers, which means not recommending overpriced rubbish!
@@LANPOCALYPSE Yes, that's right. Unfortunately, it/they don't have an independent extra PCIe slot for add-in cards. Only a x8/x8 configuration with the 1st GPU slot. Otherwise it/they is/are okey and the best board/s I've seen so far from the 800 series.
Why no taichi? It and the lite actually seem like some of the best price to performance of the whole lineup. You kinda just come across as an ASUS shill
Are there no 800 series M-ATX boards? I have the Asus X670E ROG GENE. Also, I only see one ITX motherboard from ASUS, which is not the X870E version like the previous X670E itx.
No you just need to update the bios, 7000 and 9000 seriese CPUs can work on b650/b650E and x670/x670E if you have any of those then just update the bios if you want to use the new gen
I hope that these manufacturers didn’t make too many of these boards. The only people that are buying these are super high end Overclockers and if they’re that big into it then they’re buying the Rog board as it’s the “best” for overclocking. These boards are not gunna sell at all.
@@deadchannelfrom2018 no one cares about productivity. The market for productivity is much much less than gaming. That’s why Ryzen 9000 was a flop. The productivity was great but the gaming wasn’t good enough for the price.
The rtx 5090 is still using pcie gen 4 so you can use it with almost any mb and amd mb b650 b650E x670 and x670E can use any 7000 and 9000 seriese cpu you just need to update the bios if you have it dont waste money on the new mb
Getting anxious to see reviews for Intels new stuff. Hoping Arrow lake can bring back some competition. I'll be curious to see what the prices will look like, and if we'll see the efficiency improvements they're claiming. Ordered a pretty beefy air cooler rated at 280w TDP in preparation, along with the ASUS ProArt PA602 case. Should be little to no RGB, no water, and gonna try out Thermal Grizzly's Kryosheet graphene pads. Keep maintenance and cleaning simple and easy.
Thanks to PCIe-lane-sharing by ALL X870E MoBo´s when you install an modernd 16 lane GraCard, you MUST let the upper PCIe-5 M2 Slot empty - or the M2 intalled there will "Steal" 8 of the 16 PCIe Lanes of the GraCard.... And even better: When you want to use USB-4 then you have to let a second M2-Slot empty! So in reality you have at best 2 M2-Slots for SSD + USB-4 + fast GraCard OR 3 M2-slots + fast GraCard but only slow USB OR 4 fast M2 Slots for SSD, only a "half-speed" GraCard and no USB-4 and the REALLY funny thing is that all those nice Producers of MoBo´s are mentioning the facts about PCIe-lane-sharing only in the most hidden parts of their documentations.... X870E - the worst new highend-chipset for motherboards for years....
That's just not true. Ryzen 7000 and 9000 CPUs have 28 available PCIe 5.0 lanes. 4 of those lanes are reserved for the CPU -> chipset connection. Another 4 are reserved for the USB4 controller and are not shared with anything (MSI Godlike _may_ be the exception but we won't know for sure until they release the manual and block diagram). That leaves 20 lanes to share between M.2 and PCIe slots. In all cases (at least for the currently released boards) the first M.2 slot gets 4 dedicated lanes leaving 16 unadultered lanes for the GPU. For the currently available X870E boards, those 16 lanes are only shared if the board has an additional x8 or x5 PCIe 5.0 slot or if the board has a second or third PCIe 5.0 slot. In the case of the ASRock boards there is no lane sharing whatsoever between the main PCIe slot and the M.2 slots. The X870E Taichi, for instance, can accept 4 M.2 drives whilst supporting USB4 and providing all 16 lanes to the GPU. The X870E Nova steps that up a notch and can accept 5 M.2 drives whilst supporting USB4 and providing all 16 lanes to the GPU (although that fifth M.2 drive is limited to PCIe 3.0 x2 or SATA).