ASUS ROG STRIX H370-F GAMING

Intel released its new H370 chipset, along with H310 and B360, in early April 2018. H370 logically replaces H270 and comes with a respectable standard specification to target mid-range desktop users. Motherboard vendors have already released a wide selection of motherboards for H370, many based on sensible adaptations of existing Z370 models, including this ASUS ROG Strix H370-F Gaming.

Read more @ KitGuru

ASUS ROG STRIX Z370-G GAMING (WI-FI AC)

Just take a look at the arsenal attached to this 9.6-inch square of PCB joy: two M.2 PCIe SSDs, six SATA 6GB/s ports, dual PCIe x16 slots, USB 3.0 header, five PWM fan headers, and support for 64GB of DDR4 running all the way up to 4,000MT/s. Pretty snazzy. It’s not a huge amount, but it’s more than enough to forge any number of RAID arrays, run SLI and XFire configs, and pump a decent amount of airflow around all at the same time.

Read more @ PC Gamer

ASUS WS C621E SAGE

Many of us have been eager to check out the new ASUS dual CPU workstation motherboards, wondering when it would be released; the waiting is over with the ASUS WS C621E SAGE motherboard. ASUS has made generations of dual socket Intel Xeon motherboards for higher-end workstations and each generation now defines its category.

Read more @ STH

ASRock X299 Taichi XE

This includes some extremely robust power delivery, and their fantastic XXL heatsink design to sort those pesky VRM issues out quickly enough. If that’s not enough, four full-size PCIe slots, 10 SATA ports, 3 M.2, and a freaking boatload of USB headers, networking options, and high-end audio. In short, if you need something, it’s here and then some.

Read more @ eTeknix

GIGABYTE Z370N WIFI

This board comes packed with all the features you’d expect from a Z series motherboard including dual M.2 slots with SATA and PCIe Gen 3 X4 support, USB 3.1 Type-C, RGB Fusion, and Smart Fans 5 to name a few. But you can pack all the features into a motherboard you want, it all comes down to performance.

Read more @ Modders Inc

ASRock X299 Extreme4

The X299 Extreme4 is a fine value for, say, pairing a PCIe x16 four-way M.2 adapter with a single graphics card. The price could also entice prosumers seeking to go from a six-core to an eight-core CPU. But the board’s restrictive slot configuration limits its appeal to niche cases.

Read more @ Tom’s Hardware