The ASUS RoG Crosshair VI Extreme X370 Motherboard is packed full of high-end features, so it comes with a high-end price. You’ll need to fork up around £300 for the privilege. Shop around though, we’ve seen a few come and go for a little under £300, and a majority of stores listing a little over £300.
I must admit that I do like this motherboard, it has a lot of cool features that are really appealing for the X370 platform and anyone looking to invest in Ryzen. The main problem for this motherboard right now, is that X299 is going strong, Z370 is around, and some of the other X370 boards on the market a little faster when it comes to outright performance. However, if you can snap this board up at the right price and it’s mostly a productivity, content creation workhorse such as game streaming, it’ll be a great addition to your build.
As I said, this motherboard does have a lot of compelling features. The motherboard offers up dual M.2 mounts, and there’s an M.2 PCH heatsink for one of them, allowing you to squeeze more performance under heavy usage.
It’s got loads of cool RGB lighting too, giving you plenty of visual customisation to play around with. Not everyone is sold on RGB lighting, and you can turn it off. However, this is by far one of the nicest looking motherboards on the market right now, from the rear I/o to the PCH heatsink, it’s drop-dead gorgeous.
It’s got some of the best audio hardware on the market too, thanks to SupremeFX S1220, Sonic Studio III, ES9023P DAC, and 120dB SNR output, and 113dB SNR recording. That’s going to appeal to streamers and content creators a lot.
Gaming, streaming, uploading videos, etc, all of this needs good networking hardware to get the most from your system. With Intel Gigabit Ethernet, LANGuard GameFirst and 2×2 802.11ac Wi-Fi with MU-MIMO support, you’ll not be left wanting here.
It may not lead the charge in terms of performance, but it’s a really well made motherboard and that durability should translate to round the clock stability. ASUS Safeslot, and dual BIOS, ProCool Power Connector, a BIOS LED, onboard controls, built-in Flashback, and more. All these things add up to a user-friendly experience, stability, and easier overclocking.
NVIDIA has revealed the new games that support its latest graphics card technologies. We're talking…
The Apple M4 Max, the high-end option among the new Apple processors that launched in…
As Intel prepares to expand its Core Ultra 200 series of processors with “non-K” models,…
Baldur's Gate 3 is a success, and it seems redundant to say so, but what…
The Callisto Protocol on PS5 Pro reaches 8K at 30 fps with ray tracing enabled:…
Buying studios is a fairly common thing these days. However, in recent years, we've seen…