Much to expensive for a small itx board. Most time you will not see the mainboard in a small build. The old ASUS boards seemed more valuable than this generation.
Did they fix the fire issues and bent pins in the CPU socket? I mean most people will buy this x870 mobo for the coming 9950x3d CPU once amd releases it next year at CES.
could you please do a in-depth vid on the new 2024 H7 flow? Its very different from the original and I'd like to know about radiator clearances in it for a loop. Your in-depth looks and builds are second to none.
Hi - can you PLEASE check if this board supports bclk/eclk overclock in bios? All you have to do is go into bios, choose manual in the very first dropdown (AI Overclock Tuner) and see if the eclk/bclk/asynchronous clock fields become available
@@GGFEvents Interesting, for me it is almost hard to focus on your voice because the music is so loud. I am using Audeze Maxwell with everything on default.
@@dnlzy hmm maybe that could be it. When I do my background audio it's always slightly louder on headphones. But when I adjust for headphones. You cannot hear anything from your speakers or mobile phone speaker. I'll try with my LCD-X and see how it sounds
The Gigabyte B650 ITX motherboard has three m.2 at almost half the cost of the ASUS X870 ITX motherboard with two m.2. The math ain't doesn't make sense
@@lordmustard2880 "Motherboards typically come with a chipset, which acts as a central hub for communication between the CPU, memory, and other components. However, there are some exceptions and special cases: System on Chip (SoC): Some motherboards, especially those designed for embedded systems or small form factor PCs, use SoCs where the CPU and chipset are integrated into a single chip. This reduces the need for a separate chipset. Minimalist Designs: There have been discussions and theoretical designs for motherboards that rely solely on the CPU’s integrated capabilities, bypassing the need for a traditional chipset. These designs would use the CPU’s built-in PCIe lanes, USB controllers, and other integrated features12. Specialized Boards: Certain specialized or custom-built motherboards might omit a traditional chipset, especially in scenarios where space, power consumption, or cost is a critical factor1. While these designs are not common in mainstream consumer motherboards, they do exist in specific niches. If you’re considering a motherboard without a chipset for a particular project, it might be worth looking into these specialized options."
X870 is the chipset, it has the same physical chip as the previous gen motherboards with a few minor changes and some optional things on the motherboard becoming standard. I imagine you could have up to five PCIe 5.0 SSDs if you put 4 on an addon card in the GPU slot and one on the dedicated Gen 5 M.2 slot.
I don't know why asus thought making itx versions of the x670e or now x870 (which was downgraded to basically b650e) had to be done. At least last gen, the board looked nicer, now just on looks alone outside of the awful price it's a hard pass.
I do not know why are you reviewing Asus products. At least you should advise your viewers that Asus scams their customers, and if something is bad with your Asus laptop they wont fix it properly. I never had such a bad experience when returning a product. I have a hardware malfunction and when you bring it in for the repair they do something trivial like reinstalling windows or something. Stay away from Asus.
@@GGFEvents Idk it looks like a review. But thats not the point. Point is that you should not feature Asus products to your viewers. With this videos you are supporting Asus scamming people.
@@rare6499 yes good point but they should inform people that when your new expensive laptop does not work lets say Lenovo and Acer if they cant fix it they will give you a new laptop and say sory for the bad expirience. On the other side there is Asus that will basicly tell to go f… your self. Im a ROG fanboy and it hurts me to see that my favorite brand is treating its loyal customers like this.