BIOSTAR Racing B350GT5

BIOSTAR has been on a streak since the inception of their RACING series motherboards which is an evolution of their high-end product line and in this release, we’ll be seeing BIOSTAR put its RACING series pedigree into the AMD side of things. Today we have the BIOSTAR RACING X370GT7, the top-of-the-line AM4 motherboard for BIOSTAR.

Read more @ B2G

ASUS ROG ZENITH EXTREME

There is very little lacking here compared to what can only be a Rampage-class Intel board. It’s E-ATX, for starters, yet the PCB is packed. There are four 16x PCIe slots plus single 1x and 4x slots, plus every current storage standard – U.2, six SATA 6Gbps ports, a trio of M.2 ports, plus the full variety of USB ports and headers, too.

Read more @ Bit-Tech

GIGABYTE X399 AORUS GAMING 7

Gigabyte offers a rock-solid X399 motherboard with the Aorus Gaming 7, really impressive. From beginning to end, we had no issues and the performance simply is top notch. At roughly 350 USD / 369 EURO this board certainly is a hell-of-a-lot more affordable compared to the ASUS Zenith, and it performs at least as well.

Read more @ Guru3D

ASRock X370 Taichi

Definitely one of my favorite motherboard manufacturers, ASRock continues to raise the bar when it comes to features and performance at any given price point. This trend continues today with their latest AM4 offering in the X370 Taichi motherboard which pushes the envelope of price/performance ratio and awesome factor.

Read more @ FunkyKit

ASRock X399 Taichi

ASRock’s X399 Taichi takes full advantage of the new X399 chipset and includes many of ASRock’s unique features. The motherboard is just as loaded with features as any HEDT platform from the competition and offers the same level of modern connectivity. The X399 Taichi also focuses heavily on overclocking features, and that includes a high-quality VRM.

Read more @ TweakTown

MSI X399 GAMING PRO CARBON AC

The latest chipset offers up support for quad-channel DDR4 with 8 x DIMM slots on the motherboard, making room for up to 128GB of memory. Add to that four full-size PCIe slots, for quad-GPU configurations, or additional PCIe M.2 storage, taking full advantage of the 64 PCIe lanes offered up by Threadripper. If that’s not enough, there’s also 3 x M.2, 8 x SATAIII, 2 x PCIe-Ex1, and so much more!

Read more @ eTeknix

AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X

If you need Threadripper, you’ll know it. Heavy multitaskers, streamers, those who regularly use heavily threaded applications or have heavy PCIe requirements will all experience competitive performance. The recommendation comes with a caveat, though; if you’re looking strictly for the best gaming performance, you are better served with other alternatives.

Read more @ Tom’s Hardware

ASUS ROG ZENITH EXTREME

With the release of the Ryzen Threadripper there is also a new premium chipset, the X399, and ASUS have taken up the challenge and produced a model that slots into their Republic of Gamers range, the ASUS X399 ROG Zenith Extreme.

Read more @ OC3D

AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X and 1920X

Out of the gate today is AMD’s Ryzen Threadripper family, or Threadripper for short. These CPUs take a similar design as the AMD EPYC processors, but for a consumer platform. The first two CPUs are the 1950X and 1920X, with 16 and 12 cores respectively, to be then followed by the 8 core 1900X on August 31st, and the 1920 at sometime unknown.

Read more @ AnandTech