Asus TUF Gaming X570-PLUS (wi-fi) AMD AM4 X570 ATX Gaming Motherboard
TUF GAMING X570-PLUS (WI-FI)|Motherboards|ASUS Australia
TUF GAMING X570-PLUS (WI-FI)|Motherboards|ASUS Australia
TUF GAMING X570-PLUS (WI-FI)|Motherboards|ASUS Australia
TUF GAMING X570-PLUS (WI-FI)|Motherboards|ASUS Australia
in 26 offers
The lowest price for Asus TUF Gaming X570-PLUS (wi-fi) AMD AM4 X570 ATX Gaming Motherboard right now is $199.34 at eBay.com.au, compared across 11 retailers.
The all-time low was $6.99 on 28 Nov 2025 — today's price is 2752% above the lowest ever. It has been notably cheaper before — worth setting a price alert.
Prices last updated 10 June 2026.
Last updated at 10/06/2026 11:33:09
ASUS AM4 TUF Gaming X570-Plus AM4 Zen 3 Ryzen 5000 & 3rd Gen Ryzen ATX Motherboard with PCIe 4.0, Dual M.2, 12+2 with Dr. MOS Power Stage, HDMI
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Asus tuf Gaming X570-plus (wi-fi) Socket Am4, Amd Motherboard///
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Asus tuf Gaming X570-plus (wi-fi) Socket Am4, Amd Motherboard
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ASUS TUF GAMING X570-PLUS (WI-FI), AM4, AMD (TUFGAMINGX570PLUSWI) Motherboard
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Asus tuf Gaming X570-plus (wi-fi) Socket Am4, Amd Motherboard Fully
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Asus tuf Gaming X570-plus (wi-fi) Socket Am4, Amd Motherboard
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Asus tuf Gaming X570-plus (wi-fi) Socket Am4, Amd Motherboard
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Asus Am4 Tuf Gaming X570-plus (wi-fi) Atx Motherboard With Pcie 4.0,
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For Asus Tuf Gaming X570-plus Motherboard Am4 Ddr4 128g Hdmi+dp Atx
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For Asus Tuf Gaming X570-plus (wi-fi) Ddr4 Amd Am4 128gb Motherboard
Delivery $15.70
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originally posted on bhphotovideo.com
I purchased this motherboard because it was highly recommended among many tech YouTubers as well as the gaming community for 3rd gen Ryzen processors. It features LED's on the back panel that will light up 24/7 unless turned off with the ASUS lighting software or the PS is shut off when you shut the computer down. The install process was straightforward and didn't run into too many issues with connectivity and getting it to fit into my NZXT h510 case. The UEFI (BIOS) is also fairly easy to navigate and understand while also giving you a decent amount of information without booting into windows. Now for the few (but still there) cons about this motherboard. It seems at this point the motherboard may be getting a bit outdated, despite having support for PcIE 4.0 and a ... MoreI purchased this motherboard because it was highly recommended among many tech YouTubers as well as the gaming community for 3rd gen Ryzen processors. It features LED's on the back panel that will light up 24/7 unless turned off with the ASUS lighting software or the PS is shut off when you shut the computer down. The install process was straightforward and didn't run into too many issues with connectivity and getting it to fit into my NZXT h510 case. The UEFI (BIOS) is also fairly easy to navigate and understand while also giving you a decent amount of information without booting into windows. Now for the few (but still there) cons about this motherboard. It seems at this point the motherboard may be getting a bit outdated, despite having support for PcIE 4.0 and a host of other features that were ahead of its time during its release. It ships with WiFi 5 and having any WiFi at all is a nice feature but as of writing this review WiFi 6 is the new standard and completely blows WiFi 5 out of the water in terms of speed and reliability. It would be nice if AMD updated this motherboard to include that as I don't see it costing them too much. There is also one very concerning quirk about this motherboard that will affect nearly everyone that tries to use it and is the reason why I took one star off of the rating. When you get your computer back together, install windows, and try to boot -- you will be prompted with a big beautiful blue screen of death and wont be able to boot into windows. This is due to the WiFi 5 driver being out of date and not properly communicating with windows. There are two solutions to this, but they wont entail you installing the new updated driver. 1) you can disable WiFi in the BIOS BEFORE YOU INSTALL WINDOWS, then boot into windows with a wired connection or a flash drive with the required driver, install it, then boot normally. 2) you can also put the driver on a second USB drive and install the driver while you are installing windows, although I do not recommend this method as you can run into more issues. Aside from this, the motherboard is a great budget-friendly board with nearly all the most up to date features to handle overclocking and the sheer power that 3rd gen ryzen processors require.
originally posted on microcenter.com
Picked this up paired with a 5900X and 3080 Ti. Handles everything great. I'm not an RGB fanatic so I would recommend this if that's not important to you and you want a solid motherboard. Good connection placement and had no issues with cable management. The only complaint I have, and I'd have it with most motherboards, is manufacturers really need to come up with a better system for the case connections. Maybe an adapter, or some kind of single plug standard. Having to fumble around with power +/-/ground is my least favorite part of a new build. It just feels like we could have come up with something better by now! Anyways, rant over: I would recommend this motherboard!
originally posted on neweggbusiness.com
The first PC I built lasted for about 10 years and never gave me any serious problems. This year, the power supply failed and it wouldn't POST anymore. Since it was already a decade old (practically prehistoric in the computer world these days) I put it aside and built a 2nd PC. I chose the ASUS Tuf Gaming X570 on a whim (and more positive reviews), after I had spent a couple days selecting parts based around a Gigabyte something-or-other board. And I don't regret it! Once I got my bearings, I breezed through connecting everything and the out-of-box POST and video card test went perfectly (after I used a good HDMI cable). I was able to get into the BIOS and look around at temperatures and whatnot. There are a ton of options to customize how this thing runs. Placing ... MoreThe first PC I built lasted for about 10 years and never gave me any serious problems. This year, the power supply failed and it wouldn't POST anymore. Since it was already a decade old (practically prehistoric in the computer world these days) I put it aside and built a 2nd PC. I chose the ASUS Tuf Gaming X570 on a whim (and more positive reviews), after I had spent a couple days selecting parts based around a Gigabyte something-or-other board. And I don't regret it! Once I got my bearings, I breezed through connecting everything and the out-of-box POST and video card test went perfectly (after I used a good HDMI cable). I was able to get into the BIOS and look around at temperatures and whatnot. There are a ton of options to customize how this thing runs. Placing it in the case wasn't an issue, but installing the Cooler Master CPU fan took some figuring out. Anyway I felt compelled to write this review mainly because of the trouble I had installing Windows 10 Pro, but also because of the other Cons I mentioned. I don't think I would've ever gotten the Windows 10 problem if it hadn't been for other customers on Newegg, so this is a thank you to them. I tried to install it multiple times and failed every time (Windows encountered a problem with your machine blah blah blah). This went on for days. Then I remembered the reviews on here talking about the WiFi and Bluetooth. So I disable both of them in the BIOS and Shazam! Specifically, the problem is with the WiFi controller. Even after I installed the OS, if I enabled the WiFi controller Windows 10 encountered a problem. I couldn't find any explanation for the conflict but I don't use the WiFi so I quit worrying about it. The board doesn't have an integrated graphics card, which is something OBS requires for the Window capture option to show video if you record the video from an application like VLC. Only my GPU shows up in Device Manager. I worked around that by using the Game capture feature. I don't understand the reasoning that well but apparently this board "gets" video from certain 5th Gen Ryzen CPUs, but earlier Gen require a GPU? But the board won't boot up without a GPU anyway? I have a 3rd Gen Ryzen 9 CPU so I don't know. The last thing; there is an output for a USB-C connection but there's no USB-C module on the board. There's a USB 3.2 but you'd have to convert it to a type C with an adapter, which kind of sucks because the Xbox PC controller I wanted to buy needs USB-C. And I'm not going to sacrifice all of the available USB 3.0 outputs for one type C; I don't game nearly enough to justify that. The ASUS Tuf Gaming X570 (Plus WiFi) is a very great motherboard! The Windows 10 thing is really what's preventing me from giving it a perfect score. But the cons don't outweigh the pros and I'd recommend any PC enthusiast to purchase this! Build specifics are below. ASUS Tuf Gaming X570 (Plus WiFi) board AMD Ryzen 9 3rd Gen 3900x CPU, Cooler Master Hyper 212 Black Edition CPU fan Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1660Ti video card Samsung 970 EVO M.2 2TB SSD Seagate 16TB USB 3.0 HDD Crucial Ballistix 3600 MHz DDR4 DRAM 16GB (8GBx2) RAM Corsair RM750, 750 Watt, 80+ Gold Certified power supply Phanteks Enthoo Pro ATX Full Tower Phanteks RGB LED Strip be Quiet! Pure Wings 2 case fans.
| General | |
| Product Type | Motherboard - ATX |
| Chipset Type | AMD X570 |
| Processor Socket | Socket AM4 |
| Max Processors Qty | 1 |
ASUS AM4 TUF Gaming X570-Plus AM4 Zen 3 Ryzen 5000 & 3rd Gen Ryzen ATX Motherboard with PCIe 4.0, Dual M.2, 12+2 with Dr. MOS Power Stage, HDMI
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Asus tuf Gaming X570-plus (wi-fi) Socket Am4, Amd Motherboard///
Delivery $61.03
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Asus tuf Gaming X570-plus (wi-fi) Socket Am4, Amd Motherboard
Delivery $18.83
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ASUS TUF GAMING X570-PLUS (WI-FI), AM4, AMD (TUFGAMINGX570PLUSWI) Motherboard
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Asus tuf Gaming X570-plus (wi-fi) Socket Am4, Amd Motherboard Fully
Delivery $47.07
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I purchased this motherboard because it was highly recommended among many tech YouTubers as well as the gaming community for 3rd gen Ryzen processors. It features LED's on the back panel that will light up 24/7 unless turned off with the ASUS lighting software or the PS is shut off when you shut the computer down. The install process was straightforward and didn't run into too many issues with connectivity and getting it to fit into my NZXT h510 case. The UEFI (BIOS) is also fairly easy to navigate and understand while also giving you a decent amount of information without booting into windows. Now for the few (but still there) cons about this motherboard. It seems at this point the motherboard may be getting a bit outdated, despite having support for PcIE 4.0 and a ... MoreI purchased this motherboard because it was highly recommended among many tech YouTubers as well as the gaming community for 3rd gen Ryzen processors. It features LED's on the back panel that will light up 24/7 unless turned off with the ASUS lighting software or the PS is shut off when you shut the computer down. The install process was straightforward and didn't run into too many issues with connectivity and getting it to fit into my NZXT h510 case. The UEFI (BIOS) is also fairly easy to navigate and understand while also giving you a decent amount of information without booting into windows. Now for the few (but still there) cons about this motherboard. It seems at this point the motherboard may be getting a bit outdated, despite having support for PcIE 4.0 and a host of other features that were ahead of its time during its release. It ships with WiFi 5 and having any WiFi at all is a nice feature but as of writing this review WiFi 6 is the new standard and completely blows WiFi 5 out of the water in terms of speed and reliability. It would be nice if AMD updated this motherboard to include that as I don't see it costing them too much. There is also one very concerning quirk about this motherboard that will affect nearly everyone that tries to use it and is the reason why I took one star off of the rating. When you get your computer back together, install windows, and try to boot -- you will be prompted with a big beautiful blue screen of death and wont be able to boot into windows. This is due to the WiFi 5 driver being out of date and not properly communicating with windows. There are two solutions to this, but they wont entail you installing the new updated driver. 1) you can disable WiFi in the BIOS BEFORE YOU INSTALL WINDOWS, then boot into windows with a wired connection or a flash drive with the required driver, install it, then boot normally. 2) you can also put the driver on a second USB drive and install the driver while you are installing windows, although I do not recommend this method as you can run into more issues. Aside from this, the motherboard is a great budget-friendly board with nearly all the most up to date features to handle overclocking and the sheer power that 3rd gen ryzen processors require.
Picked this up paired with a 5900X and 3080 Ti. Handles everything great. I'm not an RGB fanatic so I would recommend this if that's not important to you and you want a solid motherboard. Good connection placement and had no issues with cable management. The only complaint I have, and I'd have it with most motherboards, is manufacturers really need to come up with a better system for the case connections. Maybe an adapter, or some kind of single plug standard. Having to fumble around with power +/-/ground is my least favorite part of a new build. It just feels like we could have come up with something better by now! Anyways, rant over: I would recommend this motherboard!
The first PC I built lasted for about 10 years and never gave me any serious problems. This year, the power supply failed and it wouldn't POST anymore. Since it was already a decade old (practically prehistoric in the computer world these days) I put it aside and built a 2nd PC. I chose the ASUS Tuf Gaming X570 on a whim (and more positive reviews), after I had spent a couple days selecting parts based around a Gigabyte something-or-other board. And I don't regret it! Once I got my bearings, I breezed through connecting everything and the out-of-box POST and video card test went perfectly (after I used a good HDMI cable). I was able to get into the BIOS and look around at temperatures and whatnot. There are a ton of options to customize how this thing runs. Placing ... MoreThe first PC I built lasted for about 10 years and never gave me any serious problems. This year, the power supply failed and it wouldn't POST anymore. Since it was already a decade old (practically prehistoric in the computer world these days) I put it aside and built a 2nd PC. I chose the ASUS Tuf Gaming X570 on a whim (and more positive reviews), after I had spent a couple days selecting parts based around a Gigabyte something-or-other board. And I don't regret it! Once I got my bearings, I breezed through connecting everything and the out-of-box POST and video card test went perfectly (after I used a good HDMI cable). I was able to get into the BIOS and look around at temperatures and whatnot. There are a ton of options to customize how this thing runs. Placing it in the case wasn't an issue, but installing the Cooler Master CPU fan took some figuring out. Anyway I felt compelled to write this review mainly because of the trouble I had installing Windows 10 Pro, but also because of the other Cons I mentioned. I don't think I would've ever gotten the Windows 10 problem if it hadn't been for other customers on Newegg, so this is a thank you to them. I tried to install it multiple times and failed every time (Windows encountered a problem with your machine blah blah blah). This went on for days. Then I remembered the reviews on here talking about the WiFi and Bluetooth. So I disable both of them in the BIOS and Shazam! Specifically, the problem is with the WiFi controller. Even after I installed the OS, if I enabled the WiFi controller Windows 10 encountered a problem. I couldn't find any explanation for the conflict but I don't use the WiFi so I quit worrying about it. The board doesn't have an integrated graphics card, which is something OBS requires for the Window capture option to show video if you record the video from an application like VLC. Only my GPU shows up in Device Manager. I worked around that by using the Game capture feature. I don't understand the reasoning that well but apparently this board "gets" video from certain 5th Gen Ryzen CPUs, but earlier Gen require a GPU? But the board won't boot up without a GPU anyway? I have a 3rd Gen Ryzen 9 CPU so I don't know. The last thing; there is an output for a USB-C connection but there's no USB-C module on the board. There's a USB 3.2 but you'd have to convert it to a type C with an adapter, which kind of sucks because the Xbox PC controller I wanted to buy needs USB-C. And I'm not going to sacrifice all of the available USB 3.0 outputs for one type C; I don't game nearly enough to justify that. The ASUS Tuf Gaming X570 (Plus WiFi) is a very great motherboard! The Windows 10 thing is really what's preventing me from giving it a perfect score. But the cons don't outweigh the pros and I'd recommend any PC enthusiast to purchase this! Build specifics are below. ASUS Tuf Gaming X570 (Plus WiFi) board AMD Ryzen 9 3rd Gen 3900x CPU, Cooler Master Hyper 212 Black Edition CPU fan Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1660Ti video card Samsung 970 EVO M.2 2TB SSD Seagate 16TB USB 3.0 HDD Crucial Ballistix 3600 MHz DDR4 DRAM 16GB (8GBx2) RAM Corsair RM750, 750 Watt, 80+ Gold Certified power supply Phanteks Enthoo Pro ATX Full Tower Phanteks RGB LED Strip be Quiet! Pure Wings 2 case fans.
With wifi, bluetooth, 2 NvME slots x570 chipset eight sata connections and six fan headers this board is really well specced. The rear IO is probably missing two USB slots, but that's really easy to resolve with an internal bracket or an external hub. It has one argb header and two 12v rgb headers. Good neutral/dark colour scheme and you can turn the onboard argb strip off if you like. There are some slightly strange things about the board, but for the price certainly not a deal breaker:1). No front panel USB c connector2). No integrated IO shield. From the top elevation you'd be forgiven for thinking it did have one.3). I'd like another two USB ports on the rear IO.I have two of these boards, and have had for at least 6 months each with ryzen 7's a 3800x and a ... MoreWith wifi, bluetooth, 2 NvME slots x570 chipset eight sata connections and six fan headers this board is really well specced. The rear IO is probably missing two USB slots, but that's really easy to resolve with an internal bracket or an external hub. It has one argb header and two 12v rgb headers. Good neutral/dark colour scheme and you can turn the onboard argb strip off if you like. There are some slightly strange things about the board, but for the price certainly not a deal breaker:1). No front panel USB c connector2). No integrated IO shield. From the top elevation you'd be forgiven for thinking it did have one.3). I'd like another two USB ports on the rear IO.I have two of these boards, and have had for at least 6 months each with ryzen 7's a 3800x and a 3900x and have been running AMD 5600 and recently a 6700 graphics cards in both. Flawless stability, once you are through the boot cycle you can't hear the chipset fan either. I have had frequent BIOS updates from asus, either for win11 compatability or stability enhancements. (Not that it needed more stability). If you can live without front USB c and a slightly spartan number of rear USB slots it's an easy choice.
TLDR: Recent boards seem to have problems, avoid for now. On paper this board is pretty great. Only thing missing is a USB-C header, but hey if you don't mind that then who cares. Doing a little research, all the reviews for this board are great with the only complaint being the chipset fan always spinning at about 3500 RPM. (other boards have a low temp -> fan off mode, this seems to be a common theme among ASUS boards apparently?) Unfortunately something seems to have happened recently. Even with the fan pumping at 3500 RPM 24/7, spinning upwards to the 4000s when under load, my chipset was overheating like MAD. We're talking 5 minutes into Unigine Valley giving me 86C and 15 minutes giving me 90C with it still steadily rising. "But that's a benchmark! That's not ... MoreTLDR: Recent boards seem to have problems, avoid for now. On paper this board is pretty great. Only thing missing is a USB-C header, but hey if you don't mind that then who cares. Doing a little research, all the reviews for this board are great with the only complaint being the chipset fan always spinning at about 3500 RPM. (other boards have a low temp -> fan off mode, this seems to be a common theme among ASUS boards apparently?) Unfortunately something seems to have happened recently. Even with the fan pumping at 3500 RPM 24/7, spinning upwards to the 4000s when under load, my chipset was overheating like MAD. We're talking 5 minutes into Unigine Valley giving me 86C and 15 minutes giving me 90C with it still steadily rising. "But that's a benchmark! That's not real world results." Fair, but other games would also just cause this board to reach similar temps in similar timeframes. Once you hit 90C your system just gets absurdly unstable. Ended up returning it.
New build about 60 days old. Buggy USB. At random periods the keyboard & mouse freeze (other processes continue to run) for up to 10 seconds and then the delayed keystrokes and mouse instruction come streaming through. The stutter is annoying and really screws up anything you are doing (gaming or real work). Changed mouse, changed keyboard, updated BIOS + all drivers, installed a powered 3.0 hub. Running latest win10 pro., nothing helps. Usually the stutter is infrequent after reboot but by the end of the day, it happens quite a bit more frequently. At first I thought it might be a software issue but have been running PROCEXP and keeping an eye on it when the stutter happens... nothing zooms to the top that might be capturing all the CPU cycle plus didn't see a ... MoreNew build about 60 days old. Buggy USB. At random periods the keyboard & mouse freeze (other processes continue to run) for up to 10 seconds and then the delayed keystrokes and mouse instruction come streaming through. The stutter is annoying and really screws up anything you are doing (gaming or real work). Changed mouse, changed keyboard, updated BIOS + all drivers, installed a powered 3.0 hub. Running latest win10 pro., nothing helps. Usually the stutter is infrequent after reboot but by the end of the day, it happens quite a bit more frequently. At first I thought it might be a software issue but have been running PROCEXP and keeping an eye on it when the stutter happens... nothing zooms to the top that might be capturing all the CPU cycle plus didn't see a spike in CPU utilization anyway..... I tried all the tricks on the internet... disable C-state, lock the PCIE to V3, disabled WiFi. Had high hopes but I would not recommend buying this MB.. I'll most likely get an MSI MB and rebuild... can't stomach the buggy USB performance and aggravation of having to reboot several times a day. The best ASUS can do is a 'return & repair' which will cause me to have to bring my old boat anchor back on line and spend hours getting it back up-to-date. I hate do-overs!
Bought this for a brand-new gaming rig back in 2020. Over the last couple of years, I've upgraded some of my peripherals; got a new headset, RGB keyboard, some proper speakers, and a wired mouse. Recently I decided to give recording/streaming a go. Bought the Elgato Wave 3, but when plugging it in I receive a message stating that I don't have enough USB resources. I've tried reinstalling the drivers and rearranging my USB set up, but to no avail. See this MOBO doesn't come with USB 2.0 installed standardly, I thought that maybe I could put one of the more demanding peripherals on a 2.0 port, but there isn't one installed. That means for me to plug in my microphone and be able to use it along with all of the other USB peripherals, I would need to install an extra ... MoreBought this for a brand-new gaming rig back in 2020. Over the last couple of years, I've upgraded some of my peripherals; got a new headset, RGB keyboard, some proper speakers, and a wired mouse. Recently I decided to give recording/streaming a go. Bought the Elgato Wave 3, but when plugging it in I receive a message stating that I don't have enough USB resources. I've tried reinstalling the drivers and rearranging my USB set up, but to no avail. See this MOBO doesn't come with USB 2.0 installed standardly, I thought that maybe I could put one of the more demanding peripherals on a 2.0 port, but there isn't one installed. That means for me to plug in my microphone and be able to use it along with all of the other USB peripherals, I would need to install an extra port myself since this MOBO can't handle it all.
Mine is the non WiFi variant, and I have had the board up and running for over a year. Performance has just gotten better over time. The board has been 100% stable. Initially I had a 3600 in this board, moved to the 5600X (because I couldn't get the 5800X at the time). Features are great, plenty of fan headers, layout is good, a pair of m.2 slots, etc. I picked up this (actual) motherboard for my uncle and dropped a 5800X into it. The thing screams with 3600 MHz RAM. It's a fine board that runs upwards of 200 bucks (at times) online. I was able to pick mine up at Micro Center for 180. That store is simply amazing. I highly recommend this motherboard, the integrated intel WiFi is very good. I have the system it's in sitting over a story off the ground and several ... MoreMine is the non WiFi variant, and I have had the board up and running for over a year. Performance has just gotten better over time. The board has been 100% stable. Initially I had a 3600 in this board, moved to the 5600X (because I couldn't get the 5800X at the time). Features are great, plenty of fan headers, layout is good, a pair of m.2 slots, etc. I picked up this (actual) motherboard for my uncle and dropped a 5800X into it. The thing screams with 3600 MHz RAM. It's a fine board that runs upwards of 200 bucks (at times) online. I was able to pick mine up at Micro Center for 180. That store is simply amazing. I highly recommend this motherboard, the integrated intel WiFi is very good. I have the system it's in sitting over a story off the ground and several walls and 100 feet away from the router. Connection strength is decent to rock solid (from a comcast router with no external antennas).
This motherboard with chipset X570 is very picky for compatible memory modules. IF you install DDR4 memory into slot A1 + B1 they will work as well on slots A2 + B2 , but they will never work together with all 4 slots occupied. Motherboard will not boot up. THis is problem with very picky AMD processor memory controller and X570 chipset. If you used high latency memory as corsair RGB they will work on all slots , but only few memory module.I tried different G-skill with different speed and CAS, mushkin's none of them work together as they been working on X470 motherboard just fine. Latest bios update will not help to solve the problem. Otherwise as all TUFs from ASUS they are cheaply build ( as cheap as possible) but gives you advantage on PCI-e 4 on little bit ... MoreThis motherboard with chipset X570 is very picky for compatible memory modules. IF you install DDR4 memory into slot A1 + B1 they will work as well on slots A2 + B2 , but they will never work together with all 4 slots occupied. Motherboard will not boot up. THis is problem with very picky AMD processor memory controller and X570 chipset. If you used high latency memory as corsair RGB they will work on all slots , but only few memory module.I tried different G-skill with different speed and CAS, mushkin's none of them work together as they been working on X470 motherboard just fine. Latest bios update will not help to solve the problem. Otherwise as all TUFs from ASUS they are cheaply build ( as cheap as possible) but gives you advantage on PCI-e 4 on little bit faster M.2 nVME memory module. Otherwise I like X470 chipset - better build and better motherboards with better compatibility. All motherboard manufacturers with all X570 and B550 chipset including Z590 for Intel are build very fast with cheaper components then previous older but golden X470 or Z370 and prices are more than double today. Same is valid for Gigabyte, MSI and ASROCK.
Very solid feel to this board. The wifi antenna holder is really the only complaint that I have overall for the entire product. It's very easy for it to fall off the base. . But other than that, I'm running a 5800x with all auto overclock bios settings. Running crucial 32 gig (4 8gig sticks) 3200, at DOC settings and overclocked to 3333. Just can't seem to get one of my four sticks to post at 3400, so be it. You must manually set your ram speed in the bios, or it will auto at lower speeds. The chip sets stay a nice temperature, the board has heatsinks and fans. With auto overclocks using an a500 corsair air cooler, I'm maxing out single core around 5.1 and all core 4.6. The cooling and the silicone of the processor itself certainly play a role in achieving my auto ... MoreVery solid feel to this board. The wifi antenna holder is really the only complaint that I have overall for the entire product. It's very easy for it to fall off the base. . But other than that, I'm running a 5800x with all auto overclock bios settings. Running crucial 32 gig (4 8gig sticks) 3200, at DOC settings and overclocked to 3333. Just can't seem to get one of my four sticks to post at 3400, so be it. You must manually set your ram speed in the bios, or it will auto at lower speeds. The chip sets stay a nice temperature, the board has heatsinks and fans. With auto overclocks using an a500 corsair air cooler, I'm maxing out single core around 5.1 and all core 4.6. The cooling and the silicone of the processor itself certainly play a role in achieving my auto success, but the motherboard certainly is not the limiting factor.
| General | |
| Product Type | Motherboard - ATX |
| Chipset Type | AMD X570 |
| Processor Socket | Socket AM4 |
| Max Processors Qty | 1 |