ASUS ROG STRIX X570-E GAMING

The ROG STRIX X570-E Gaming, despite the lamentable name claims to be one such offering. Think of it as a Crosshair VIII Hero (Wi-Fi), with a number of things removed or changed. Surprisingly, what has been done away with leaves much of the motherboard intact and that means you get all the ROG ‘exclusive’ features. Perhaps not in their full glory, but flashed out enough to make it worth your while.

Read more @ TheOverclocker

MSI MEG X570 ACE

The X570 ACE sports a unique style. There’s a large portion of the board covered by extensive heatsinks adorned by a unique dark grey and copper theme, with a mirrored section for impressive RGB lighting. However, RGB lighting as a whole is kept to a minimum, contrary to many manufacturers at the moment.

Read more @ Vortez

MSI MEG X570 ACE

MSI has seven X570s in its arsenal, and sitting nearer the top of the stack is the MEG X570 Ace that retails for £350. Compared to the firm’s own MPG X570 Gaming Plus, which we reckon is a decent entry-level effort costing exactly half as much, MSI adds an extra PCIe x16 slot, a trio of additional USB 3.1Gen2 (Type-A), explicit support for SLI, 2.5G LAN, WiFi 6, significantly beefier cooling and VRM support, along with better RGB lighting. Decent differentiation, then.

Read more @ Hexus

GIGABYTE X570 AORUS PRO

A pair of PCI-E 4.0 NVMe slots with Thermal-Guard heatsinks give access to rapid storage and ALC1220-VB onboard audio with WIMA Audio Capacitors guarantees excellent quality music and gameplay. Intel Gigabit LAN, PCI-E and Memory Armour, solid pin power connectors and much more round out the umpteen offerings.

Read more @ Vortez

ASUS ROG CROSSHAIR VIII HERO (WI-FI)

Despite the occasional missteps and brand dilution, the ROG brand has been remarkably consistent and excellent overall. Therefore, we have high hopes for the latest incarnation of the Crosshair series. The Crosshair VIII Hero Wi-Fi is based on AMD’s X570 chipset and costs around $379.99 at the time of this writing. 

Read more @ The FPS Review

ASRock X570 Extreme4

Today we test on OCinside.de with the ASRock X570 Extreme4 a powerful ATX motherboard for current AMD Ryzen 3000 processors. We overclocked the AMD Ryzen 3000 motherboard with an AMD Ryzen 7 3800X processor and tested it extensively. In the following motherboard review we show the impressive features of the ASRock X570 Extreme4 and will see how it compares to the previous AMD motherboards.

Read more @ OCInside.de

ASUS ROG CROSSHAIR VIII IMPACT

That M.2-like port at the bottom is actually the audio circuitry, and the “heatsink” is just a fascia. Only the custom audio board will work in it, and Asus specifically prohibits using anything else, stating it could damage the board. The audio itself is a typical Asus-tweaked Realtek ALC1220 codec dubbed SupremeFX and sports an ESS Sabre 9023P DAC.

Read more @ Bit-Tech

MSI MEG X570 ACE

With the MEG ACE MSI have taken another step by tying the two MOSFET heatsinks to the chipset heatsink too thanks to a long heat pipe that runs down the side of the DDR4 memory slots. It’s certainly a unique solution. We can’t recall any motherboard adopting the same solution.

Read more @ OC3D

MSI MEG X570 ACE

Equipped with a 14-phase VRM solution, a well-designed onboard cooling system, and triple M.2 slots, the MSI MEG X570 ACE is aiming to prove its worth in the enthusiast segment of the AM4 market.

Read more @ KitGuru