The geek in me loves these videos. I only recently got into gaming pcs after being a console pleb for all my life(cost was my excuse). Now I've undertook the task of building my daughter her own rig because she deserves it, never gave me any problems, got good grades, graduated with honors, etc.. In the past I was too poor to have considered this but always wished I could. I appreciate these videos because they are teaching me about stuff I had no clue how they work or what is just hype. Thank you Anthony and Alex and Linus for sure for showing me I don't just have to throw all the money at it to have a great system.
Good job dad. For real money should be spent on good storage like m.2 or ssd, processor, cooling and graphics card if it's for gaming. Do not need best ram just 16 to 32 anymore than that and it's waste unless you doing it for video editing etc. you can build a good 🎮 ng rig for like 1200 bucks. Honestly you can refurbish an older rig for like 800 bucks if it has a good motherboard for expansion like an old school asus 370e strix. Gl on build
One of the most Canadian things ever is Anthony talking about miles per hour, but using a kilometers per hour speedometer limit, and the graphic also using a kph set up.
Could I squeeze a bit more lifetime out of my X470 AM4 motherboard with the "new" 5000 Ryzen CPUs ? I'm currently running a Zen+ CPU so, there might be an upgrade path for him.
Yeah totally I agree since I only just built a budget amd setup with a ryzen 5 5600g being the most expensive part, I'd be interested in an amd version too cause the board (can't recall the exact board atm but it's msi) I did get is good enough for now but, it would be nice to see what's best out there and if there's any worth upgrading too since the cpu should suit all of my needs at least until the gpu shortage and price hikes end
Just gotta love this dude. He's so freaking relaxing to listen and watch to. Anthony could easily narrate documentaries about stoves for 10 hours and I'd watch it.
See... and right off the bat when you mention number 2 on your tests at 4:11, this is a heavy reason alone why people should follow this channel and others on LMG. Not only are you pointing out all of the objective results, you are helping viewers save money while presenting them the best bang for their buck that is still a high end performing part! I will forever love this about LTT/LMG because they not only care, they know it matters!
When buying a new motherboard the best things to question are: 1) Does it have all the ports and internal connections I need? 2) Can it handle the power requirements for the CPU's I want to use (including what you might upgrade to)? 3) Does it fit into the case that I want to use? If the answer to all of these is yes, it's just a question of balancing ease of use features, visuals and overall perceived quality against the cost.
@@nocturnal101ravenous6 Yea but LTT makes videos targeting people that are completely clueless and their business model is to spoon feed them basic tech info. If a true Power User is watching LTT to learn things than this industry as a whole is in trouble. This video is the perfect example, its just fluff and filler, there is no information here, as far as I can tell its sole purpose is to fill an advertising quota. "Dont overheat components" is not some new radical idea. Honestly im not sure how you conflated this topic with a lack of money, its kind of odd. The cost of your build does not equate to your skill as a power user in any way. Really it just makes you sound like a wannabe elitist prick, trying to look down at the poor peons on the internet you imagine you are better than.
I just buy what works best for my daily gaming/work use. Serious, breaking the bank to for a PC that's way overkill for what you use it for is a bit of a diminishing return.
In this case with the money saved on buying a 11700k instead of a 11900k you could easily go for a z590 mainboard. And that only gives a slightly less max boost clock and a better base clock. But I would keep my money till the prices for the new socket comes down or go AMD
This would have been a lot more interesting with B boards since they’re not checking over clock capabilities, which defeats the large amount of purpose to half of these boards. IMO.
Excellent video. I'd love to see this as a yearly thing (for both AMD and Intel boards) where you take the most popular boards from each manufacturer to give a comprehensive overview.
This is actually really informative. I really only knew about the difference in I/O and ports so it’s good to know some of the lower end ones do come with other limitations.
Yeah those days are never coming back...you also don’t wanna cheap out I made that mistake when I upgraded to my 4790k years back I went with an ASrock mobo that was dead on arrival the next one fried within a month and then the last one caused issues with almost all of my parts except the video card and power supply. I will never get their brand again.
@@jakeman025 I cheaped out on my mobo for my 4790k with a board that cost around 80, and a long time after that I killed it with water 😅 oops, and got a msi gaming 9 and it made exactly 0 change in ram, cpu frequency, etc, even the benchmarks were exactly the same pretty much.
If that B560 was the worst out of the bunch, I feel like the asrock B450m that came in my prebuilt is even worse. I've recently upgraded my GPU to an EVGA RTX2060 12gb and am currently chasing what I think is a power limit issue. I have a Ryzen5 3600 and an 850w 80Plus gold power supply. Watching GPU-Z, the "board power draw" seams to top out at 190-195w (150-ish watts of that is GPU draw). At the same time, the performance cap reason displays PWR, VRel, and VOp. The only tweaking I've done to the GPU is maxing out the power and temp limit using MSI afterburner. If I limit the FPS to 60hz (my monitors refresh rate), I get VRel and VOp for performance cap reason. I've pretty much come to the conclusion that my motherboard doesn't have sufficient enough power available to run my GPU to it's full potential. This video is one of many I've watched chasing this issue. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Also looking for motherboard upgrade options if mine really is the problem. I like the way the MSI Bios looks, a lot of options and looks relatively easy to follow/understand. Open to suggestions.
PCIe slot itself supplies up to 75 watts, all the other power comes from the 12v lines coming from your PSU. The motherboard will definitely not be affecting power to GPU, only CPU. You don't describe any of the problems you are having (low FPS? stuttering? etc) so its tough to narrow down your issue, but it is 1000% not a GPU power issue. You are probably bottlenecked by slow RAM or storage. Those warnings GPU-Z are giving you are simply telling you that the card is already maxed out and you are hitting non changeable internal limits on voltage.
@TC It seems like my fps is lower than it should be for what the gpu is. I mostly play American truck simulator but also play snowrunner, a couple of the doom games, and a few others. On ATS and snowrunner, I get near 100 fps according to the 99% display on nvidias overlay. My render latency is about 20ms average. It'll go down between 10 and 15. I feel like it should be better. I have an older asus monitor (75hz refresh using display port) and recently upgraded to ryzen 7 5700X, ram to 32 gb 3200mhz, and added 1tb m.2 to the 1tb sata ssd that's was already in the system. Is that 75w pcie power limit the same for all current motherboards? Maybe I'm just not understanding or aware of the physical limits of my gpu. I've seen power usage for 30 series cards reach around 350w. I know my card is a different series. Maybe my expectations are too high. 🤷♂️
@@laid-backgarage4412 The 75W is a limitation of the PCIE port and it is the same for all boards. If your GPU needs 200W of power then PCIE on your motherboard will supply 75W which the MoBo knows about since it goes through it but the rest of the power, 125W, go directly from the PSU through the 8-pin PCIE connector on the side towards the case. The GPU should be able to measure how much it draws overall but I don't think the motherboard would know.
I would've preferred to see this with AMD motherboards because you could at least run the memory on the same speed and timings. Or for the test to use 2133 memory.
@@Superiorer using an asrock ab350 board that cost me 50 bucks incl shipping brand new. Used it since my 1300 and now woth my 3600 still going strong, even with memory and cpu oc. Obvz i got no reference but im pretty sure thatll do to agree with you :D
@@daviddimeglio5466 depends on what you mean by useless i guess? I found it a bit hard to navigate, but its my first pc so no clue how it compares to others. I was able to oc ram and cpu like i said no problem
@@kennethparadis2733 Well, it bit them in the ass in my case. They advertise the current generation of HP Omen machines as having XMP RAM and being upgradeable, but the RAM doesn't run XMP profiles (only achieves 3200MHz through horrible JEDEC settings), XMP cannot be enabled in the bios, and if you put in any RAM other than the specific HyperX modules that HP ships, it won't run at 3200MHz at all. I learned this when I bought a machine with 16gb of RAM, and then got another 16gb of store-bought HyperX RAM (which looks identical, but apparently isn't) to take it up to 32gb. So I threatened to take them to the fair trading authorities here in Australia, and they rolled over and replaced my whole machine with a top of the line one with 32gb out of the box, more storage, and a better GPU at no cost to me. As to why I bought an Omen to begin with, I get VERY good prices with HP through my employer, and I was literally getting a whole machine for only a bit more than the cost of the GPU.
@@YetMoreCupsOfTea I have a HP Omen and noticed the same thing, tempted to just swap out the HP motherboard though and in theory everything else should just work…
@@Shoot231 I have heard of someone doing that, but in my case I just forced them to give me a machine with 32gb of RAM on threat of dragging them through the fair trading system here in Australia. Our consumer protection laws are no joke, and they clearly could tell they were in the wrong.
I love motherboard content. Choosing a motherboard, back in the day, was a real challenge, given all the bleeding edge tech becoming available so rapidly, alongside all the proprietary feature sets many boards came with. Not so much any more, but I do miss watching JJ and Paul on NeweggTV spend an hour going over absolutely every feature of the latest Asus Deluxe board. These days an unboxing of enthusiast motherboards would actually be great, because I've found it hard to know for sure exactly what's in the box as far as accessories. I've seen boards that say "this feature requires such and such accessory" and shows the accessory pictured on the Newegg or Amazon page, only to find it doesn't come in the box. Frustrating.
Wow i feel the total opposite haha 🤣🤣 Back in the days there wasn't that much references and the top prices were 300ish only for a few and rarely pushing in the 400 maybe for 1 or 2 models...now...😶😶🙄🤣🤣 So to me it was kinda easier to choose as you hadn't have to play "where's charly" to find the very important difference that could change your entire life between 2 boards from the same manufacturer 😂 Sadly DFI is only making industrial boards now, hopefully EVGA's still around but isn't distributed in every country 😥
Surprisingly had a pretty noticable improvement in Overclocking potential with a new ASUS ROG Strix Motherboard after my more budget level MSI Board failed. Now my 3000mhz RAM that was previously only stable at 2866mhz can run at even 3200mhz and my Ryzen 5 2600 went from stable at 3.7GHz at 1.3V to 3.8GHz at 1.3V making my overall experience just a bit smoother.
TLDR: Buy a reputable motherboard that has the features that you need (number of USB ports, M.2 slots, SATA Ports, PCIe slots, etc) and don't worry about the fancy "gaming" and "extreme" monikers. Great video!
I buy whatever Buildzoid tells me to buy. He said buy a MSI B550 Unify-X. I bought a B550 Unify-X. He said buy dual-rank Samsung B-die. I bought dual-rank Samsung B-die. (the B550 Unify-X is a full-featured ATX motherboard with 2 DIMM slots and ridiculous overclocking potential)
Hey guys, I think you should do a video on the consistency of board performance for boards made during the pandemic. Due to component shortages, counterfeit parts are flooding the markets. These parts can affect board performance and it would be interesting to see how well manufactures are monitoring this.
@@maemilev You need to check your facts. AMD has some killer CPUs out there, and I use Intel in my gaming machine currently. Especially the higher end AMD products. Surely you’ve seen them review them on this channel.
Anthony is a great presenter. I’m really looking forward to another no-frills, bare bones computer build video! My last build pretty much mirrored Anthony’s recommendation, we just need the right products in the market and another video from Anthony!
Definitely interested in seeing more of this kind of video. I remember every time I've helped build a system the Mobo is always the least satisfactory part to choose because shy of having WIFI 6, and "is this the overclocking chip-set or not?" there often isn't a really good way to choose boards, especially if you're not planning to make much use out of some of the more advanced features.
I was told like a hundred times that I should get the OC board just bc I'm getting (got) an unlocked cpu. Even though I dont need OCing bc im not gaming on this, using it as a DAW machine. Should I waste my money on the $200 z590 mobo or go cheaper, despite having an unlocked cpu? It seems like only one person I spoke with had any sort of intelligence whatsoever, and told me that itd be perfectly normal to have an Unlocked cpu on a non-OC board. But ultimately I let all these ppl get to my head lol what do
@@TheAbandonedAccount7 I mean, I kind of want to ask at that point then "well if you don't want the better VRMs and want to cheap out on the board, and you don't want to do any overclocking, then why don't you try to save the money on a K sku and just get the non-K instead?" @XeroShifter See this is my thing, which is that lots of people doing this are just kids wanting to play their favourite triple A game and sometimes the kind of person that goes "I'll give you $200 to overclock my RAM" which sure, there's many advantages to PC gaming, but you eventually just start to go "I mean, you could consider a console, even though they suck." Everyone who builds a machine liek this is going to be using it as a computer for multiple purposes, and people are so damn shortsighted in modern Western culture top to bottom that it's like, even the question of questioning what they may need to use it for in the future never occurs to them. So like, you may be playing PUBG right now, but maybe you'll get into photo editing later. Or maybe you end up needing it to work. I guess it's hard to explain concisely but just the sense of possibilities is there alongside problems you often don't ask when learning to build. I know it's the least glamourous seeming part (other than, PSU maybe?) but just like the PSU, it shouldn't be completely cheaped out on just because it is "boring" but you don't need to overspend either. I disagree with the logic that "if you didn't ask for this feature you don't need it" mentality because the now isn't later, and if you really want to understand this extreme stay on a Dell or HP prebuilt for years and years on end and then come back and tell me the motherboard doesn't matter. It's just hard when it's kids or old people, or otherwise someone so clueless they can't figure out the right question to ask and it becomes a bit of inference and guesswork. But yes, generally you don't want to be stuck on a shitty 4pin EPS having, VRM or chipset heatsink lacking, 4 SATA port having, no third PWM pins locked down BIOS'd piece of shit for seemingly endless frustrating years of your life. I said this before and say it again, your motherboard is the one and only component you will likely never replace or upgrade. Even your power supply, might be that someday nVidia releases a 600w drawing literal meme, and you actually have to get a better PSU anyway. You'll likely get a new RAM kit sometime maybe, and you'll probably replace your CPU once and upgrade your GPU twice, on average, but you're probably never going to unscrew that board itself from your case from the very first moment you screw it into your standoffs, and if you ever do, it's just going to be to take the cooler backplate off, so no, I don't think you should cheap out on anywhere from 6 to 10+ years of its (and your) lifetime just to save an extra fifty bucks.
When I upgraded from B350 to X570, replacing no other component, I saw no effect in any benchmark except for the newer Assassin's Creed games where the improvement was shocking... I went from around 60 to 80 FPS.
@@Tonyx.yt. why wouldn't that show in Cinebench, Geekbench, 3DMark, or any other game benchmark I could think of? It literally only showed in Assassin's Creed!
@@jasondailey9402 ac creed games are heavy on CPU about other stuff probably they don't last that long to show any differents while you spent much more time in games which means more load for your cpu
To me it was to be expected but I agree it was a very well done comparison. You've got to figure that they aren't going to do any excessive engineering for the higher end boards because it would cut into their bottom line.
I love that you can tell that there's car enthusiast writers and staff at LTT. I'd love to see a video one day on those who'd be willing touring their cars or Alex talking about his previous job if he's at liberty to do so.
I have the MSI Z590 got it from amazon and it was after studying motherboards extensively. This pretty much confirms my studies. I am very happy to see that the money I spent was well spent. I also use good tower cooling and I just set it to water cooling to boost the PLM. I do sometimes get up to 75c but this is due to my case having terrible airflow. A few things about the MSI mobo he failed to mention: It supports 2 M.2 Gen 3 and the casings to it's some of the best to keep temps low and they are accompanied by a thick plated thermal pad. A good case will drastically reduce your M.2 temps. It supports up to 6 SATA AND 2 M.2 making it one of the few cases where you can have up to 8 different storage units without experiencing speed reduction. I use all but 1 of the storage and I can confirm it all works extremely well. Another perk of the MSI Z590 is it has a built-in surround system, which lets you connect a surround system to its many audio ports on the back. It has a built-in USB C Thunderbolt 3 port that allows you to connect either 4 more USB 3.1 ports, 2 more SSDs, or use an external GPU is you happen to have one. It has tons of uses and few mobos have this built into them. The main reason people buy a good mobo isn't for the performance boost but for these two things. To be able to use as many storage units as possible and to be able to use NVME without it getting too hot. (NVME are especially susceptible to dying when not properly cooled.) Then it's for the features. The MSI supports 2 ethernet ports, one is realtech and another is Intel both with unique ports, drivers, and functions. You will find the performance of Realtech and Intels ethernet ports to be unique and work differently with different CPUs and routers. It's perfect if you have fiber internet (I do) and want to get the most out of the speeds. The MSI BIOS was by far the best I ever experienced, very user-friendly, and allows you to change all sorts of things. The MSI Z590 has multiple built-in capacitors that prevent you from burning out your CPU when you OC it. However, as he said nowadays burning out your CPU is far more uncommon. I disagree with the Asrock, they are basically comparing pure performance, and as you can clearly see most of the mobos were performing almost the exact same. It's about features more than anything and if they did any real form of OC they will find the MSI outperforms by far the other mobos. I think they really missed a lot of key points about how a mobo can affect performance and the usefulness of a MOBO. For instance, you won't ever find a cheap 100$ or less mobo with 2 ethernet ports that work uniquely and 6 SATA and 2 nvme that work all at the same time with no performance drop. None exist. And that is why people spend the extra money for a 150-200$ mobo, to be able to use those extra ports! That's why I replaced my 80$ mobo with 4 SATA ports and 1 nvme for the MSI Z590 with 2 NVME and 6 SATA ports. I'm very disappointed in this video, they are basically comparing apples to cellary and try to state comparisons that don't even make sense and are completely irrelevant to the situation. People don't buy an NVME for instance to get an FPS boost on their video games, they buy it to reduce load times. However, that is what this video is doing, basically, it's comparing multiple NVMEs to see which gives the greatest FPS boost in video games. Maybe you should make a video like that next? That's sarcasm by the way and I wouldn't be interested at all in a video like that.
You only need 2 VRM's in alternating phases, just put a zip lock bag of water on top & make sure it doesn't leak. Then it'll cool them off & they can run as fast as they want.
I know the VRM problem too well. I had an AMD FX6300 until recently, with a crappy $50 Biostar mainboard that couldn't handle the overclock. Had to install an extra cooler blowing at the back of the mainboard.
This is what I said on HUB's comparison of B550 boards when they launched last year: their comparisons using full load with Ryzen 9s were misleading because I daresay majority of people aren't using those CPUs and for vast majority of boards, Ryzen 5/7 will run perfectly fine. There is no need to be concerned about VRM temperatures just because a reviewer said they reached 110C using a Ryzen 9 3990X on Prime95.
My ASRock Z370 Extreme4 has been a workhorse for me for years, overclocking my i7-8700K to almost 5 Ghz. No problems overclocking my memory either. Although overclocking was somewhat new to me, I found a youtube video how to set up overclocking for this particular board, and the settings worked like a dream. Never had a crash. At the time, the Z370 was highly recommended plus it came at a great price, well below the competition. Props to ASROCK.
@@Frank_Pods do they still boot-loop the first 2 seconds at startup? (after power disconnect) i.e. 2s on, 2s off, on sometimes even more loops depending on the board. Linus had one with 3 off cycles.
What i am wondering about: when a motherboard can have such an impact, even across only the expensive ones, how reliable are the comparisons between amd and intel cpus? Because often there are only small differences in numbers there.
You can really only compare complete system versus complete system, when the CPU types/brands are so different, as it forces so much else to be different too. You'd have to compare a *lot* of complete systems against each other, to see if there's a clear winner overall between CPU types/brands (and their corresponding supporting chipsets).
From what i understand here this is more important for high end CPUs. If you wanna play on something like a Ryzen 5 3600 for example, the Performance differences between Boards are not that big.
ASRock has always seemed like a company that likes to make boards ready to be overclocked at a great price without all the marketing bs. They may not have every single cutting edge bell and whistle, but I have not regretted getting mine. my 10 year old cpu is still going strong with it ^^ (should maybe consider overclocking it at this point..)
Not gonna lie, as somebody who is new to pc gaming and set up, going into a Micro Center for the first time was pretty cool. It’s like the Home Depot of computer stuff.
Interesting results I didn't factor my new motherboard into performance (I guess without videos like this there really is nothing to go on. I just upgraded my motherboard and CPU, ultimately budget/price difference won out over potential future expansion/slight performance advantages. I first picked up a Gigabyte Z590 paired with a 12600k, but ended up swapping it out for a similar B550 Mobo with a AMD 5600. It ended up being about half the price when factoring in needing to immediately add a beefy cooler to the Intel system.
what im asking myself quite a while now, are ATX boards considerably better than micro-ATX and other formfactors. Thinking about doing a smallff build with an N200 case or something like that, since some cases can house cards upto 4090 sizewise and are easy to transport/the GPU doesnt sagg so much
Thanks for the shout-out 😬💪🏼
I am the first reply
@@narwin2477 ok
Giraffenhals
Checking out your channel!
Your welcome
I really loved how Brian the electrician earned so much cred to have his own boss theme song and recurring gigs at LTT..
Brian the Electrician has reached the echelons of Turbo Yoda
@flyYTguy Thunderbolt is evolving into Arc Flash.
The geek in me loves these videos. I only recently got into gaming pcs after being a console pleb for all my life(cost was my excuse). Now I've undertook the task of building my daughter her own rig because she deserves it, never gave me any problems, got good grades, graduated with honors, etc.. In the past I was too poor to have considered this but always wished I could. I appreciate these videos because they are teaching me about stuff I had no clue how they work or what is just hype. Thank you Anthony and Alex and Linus for sure for showing me I don't just have to throw all the money at it to have a great system.
Cool
Niceeee
Very wholesome comment, you sound like a great dad 😊
w father
Good job dad. For real money should be spent on good storage like m.2 or ssd, processor, cooling and graphics card if it's for gaming. Do not need best ram just 16 to 32 anymore than that and it's waste unless you doing it for video editing etc. you can build a good 🎮 ng rig for like 1200 bucks. Honestly you can refurbish an older rig for like 800 bucks if it has a good motherboard for expansion like an old school asus 370e strix. Gl on build
TLDR: As long as the VRM isn't thermal throttling, it doesn't really matter.
TLDR: Invest in fans
That's what she said...
More like TLDW
Which is why I ziptied four 40mil fans to the flat chunks of metal that MSI slapped on my X370 Gaming Pro Cabrón. It sits in my server now.
Thanks, this should be the answer in the conclusion section of the video.
One of the most Canadian things ever is Anthony talking about miles per hour, but using a kilometers per hour speedometer limit, and the graphic also using a kph set up.
Yeah fortunately? Fuck the imperial system
@@pauljemand8832 Glorious Imperial System > peasant metric system
Imperial is the best. There are 13 thumbs in a duck, and 27 ducks in a queen's lake, and 3 queen's lakes in a mile. What a great system!
@@guadalupe8589 🤡
@@guadalupe8589 You died
------ TRY AGAIN
this sponsor/video theme combination is great, you can easily advertise without it changing what the video tries to bring across👏
An AMD version of the same tests would be greatly appreciated especially if we are going to get new ryzen 6000 boards
Also sub $100 boards
Yeah I'm in the market for a mobo and this was going to be my answer but its Intel.....
Yeah we need that video!
Could I squeeze a bit more lifetime out of my X470 AM4 motherboard with the "new" 5000 Ryzen CPUs ?
I'm currently running a Zen+ CPU so, there might be an upgrade path for him.
Yeah totally I agree since I only just built a budget amd setup with a ryzen 5 5600g being the most expensive part, I'd be interested in an amd version too cause the board (can't recall the exact board atm but it's msi) I did get is good enough for now but, it would be nice to see what's best out there and if there's any worth upgrading too since the cpu should suit all of my needs at least until the gpu shortage and price hikes end
Just gotta love this dude. He's so freaking relaxing to listen and watch to. Anthony could easily narrate documentaries about stoves for 10 hours and I'd watch it.
To be fair, a 10 hour documentary about the history of the stove would probably be pretty interesting anyway, but yeah
Anthony x Technology Connections crossover.
I second that, ngl that sounds like an interesting documentary on stoves with or without Anthony
you’d probably watch paint dry or grass grow too. so, doesn’t say much
Lmao Anthony!
See... and right off the bat when you mention number 2 on your tests at 4:11, this is a heavy reason alone why people should follow this channel and others on LMG. Not only are you pointing out all of the objective results, you are helping viewers save money while presenting them the best bang for their buck that is still a high end performing part!
I will forever love this about LTT/LMG because they not only care, they know it matters!
wow this aged like fine milk 😂
I've been wondering this for years, and if anyone were to be trusted, it's Anthony!
Yeah me to !
@Ladioz u understand little
@Ladioz Anthony has more knowledge tho
@Ladioz Anthony is sigma
Ain't there several Hardware Test Sites and Reviews? 0o
When buying a new motherboard the best things to question are:
1) Does it have all the ports and internal connections I need?
2) Can it handle the power requirements for the CPU's I want to use (including what you might upgrade to)?
3) Does it fit into the case that I want to use?
If the answer to all of these is yes, it's just a question of balancing ease of use features, visuals and overall perceived quality against the cost.
Well there are some more things that one can want that are much harder to find. PCI-passthrough support for example.
@@nocturnal101ravenous6 Yea but LTT makes videos targeting people that are completely clueless and their business model is to spoon feed them basic tech info. If a true Power User is watching LTT to learn things than this industry as a whole is in trouble. This video is the perfect example, its just fluff and filler, there is no information here, as far as I can tell its sole purpose is to fill an advertising quota. "Dont overheat components" is not some new radical idea.
Honestly im not sure how you conflated this topic with a lack of money, its kind of odd. The cost of your build does not equate to your skill as a power user in any way. Really it just makes you sound like a wannabe elitist prick, trying to look down at the poor peons on the internet you imagine you are better than.
I just buy what works best for my daily gaming/work use. Serious, breaking the bank to for a PC that's way overkill for what you use it for is a bit of a diminishing return.
4) does it have a good bios or a unusable one like asrock?
In this case with the money saved on buying a 11700k instead of a 11900k you could easily go for a z590 mainboard. And that only gives a slightly less max boost clock and a better base clock. But I would keep my money till the prices for the new socket comes down or go AMD
Please tell me I'm not alone in just jamin out on the intro music, like bang my head an everything, probably half the reason I watch these.
This is the kind of video we need more of. Solid recommendation on a category of hardware based on thorough testing and value comparison.
Yeah, but only including one top level processor seems pretty weird. They should've included something from lower midrange as well.
A lot of sites do that every year, maybe that is the reason LTT doesn't.
This would have been a lot more interesting with B boards since they’re not checking over clock capabilities, which defeats the large amount of purpose to half of these boards. IMO.
Excellent video. I'd love to see this as a yearly thing (for both AMD and Intel boards) where you take the most popular boards from each manufacturer to give a comprehensive overview.
That'd be a deep rabbit hole, considering that "popular boards" probably come with different sockets and different supported CPUs and RAM-type.
HUB practically does this testing whenever a new chipset comes out. You should be very well equipped to find a good board.
This is actually really informative. I really only knew about the difference in I/O and ports so it’s good to know some of the lower end ones do come with other limitations.
Anthony is the man when it comes presenting and keeping the whole vid energized!
I want to hug him
@@CorporalAdrianShephard mmmmmmmmm not so sure he would like it or not .
07:14 Gotta love Anthony
Best intro of the year. Love you Anthony
"out of factory performance"
*proceeds to set the power limit to 4000W*
Yes factory, indeed
Yep, thats some proper industrial power limit.
If cpu doesnt glow white hot, then there is still headroom x'D
Loving all the new intros being so high energy lately, always a fun time
ye same
why do i feel the opposite wtf is wrong with me :/
@@AppleW Don't get mad but...it's because you're boring. Sorry grandpa :(
@@MrTuNNe dont bet mad but your predictable attention is also boring
@@MrTuNNe damn feel bad for u if ur grandpa's 15
Therapist: Highlander Anthony can't hurt you.
Highlander Anthony:
It did in the Intel 4 Cpu era, Front Bus Speed and ddr1 vs 2 And Agp vs Pci
All in the same generation. It was insane back then.
I had a mobo (asrock iirc) with both agp and pcie and support for both ddr1 and ddr2. Crazy times indeed.
@@michalpbielawski I had one too. I must have totally suppressed that memory until I read your comment. You’re right, those were crazy times.
I haven't thought about FSB for ages. Just like CRT's and ribbon cables. I think I just outed myself as being old 🤣
I remember a time when Expensive boards cost about $100...
Gotta love the shitty market atm, the chip shortage effects mobos too
Yeah those days are never coming back...you also don’t wanna cheap out I made that mistake when I upgraded to my 4790k years back I went with an ASrock mobo that was dead on arrival the next one fried within a month and then the last one caused issues with almost all of my parts except the video card and power supply. I will never get their brand again.
@@jakeman025 I cheaped out on my mobo for my 4790k with a board that cost around 80, and a long time after that I killed it with water 😅 oops, and got a msi gaming 9 and it made exactly 0 change in ram, cpu frequency, etc, even the benchmarks were exactly the same pretty much.
I remember a time when Expensive boards couldn't be purchased at all; they only existed in prototype labs.
@@deusexaethera I'm still using an 8 core CPU from 2012 on a cheap motherboard, so I haven't progressed much.
If that B560 was the worst out of the bunch, I feel like the asrock B450m that came in my prebuilt is even worse. I've recently upgraded my GPU to an EVGA RTX2060 12gb and am currently chasing what I think is a power limit issue. I have a Ryzen5 3600 and an 850w 80Plus gold power supply. Watching GPU-Z, the "board power draw" seams to top out at 190-195w (150-ish watts of that is GPU draw). At the same time, the performance cap reason displays PWR, VRel, and VOp. The only tweaking I've done to the GPU is maxing out the power and temp limit using MSI afterburner. If I limit the FPS to 60hz (my monitors refresh rate), I get VRel and VOp for performance cap reason. I've pretty much come to the conclusion that my motherboard doesn't have sufficient enough power available to run my GPU to it's full potential. This video is one of many I've watched chasing this issue. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Also looking for motherboard upgrade options if mine really is the problem. I like the way the MSI Bios looks, a lot of options and looks relatively easy to follow/understand. Open to suggestions.
I have the same issue. I also have a b450 pro wifi with an 7900xtx and 5900x cpu my FPS went from 90 FPS to 130 FPS in warzone....
PCIe slot itself supplies up to 75 watts, all the other power comes from the 12v lines coming from your PSU. The motherboard will definitely not be affecting power to GPU, only CPU. You don't describe any of the problems you are having (low FPS? stuttering? etc) so its tough to narrow down your issue, but it is 1000% not a GPU power issue. You are probably bottlenecked by slow RAM or storage. Those warnings GPU-Z are giving you are simply telling you that the card is already maxed out and you are hitting non changeable internal limits on voltage.
@TC It seems like my fps is lower than it should be for what the gpu is. I mostly play American truck simulator but also play snowrunner, a couple of the doom games, and a few others. On ATS and snowrunner, I get near 100 fps according to the 99% display on nvidias overlay. My render latency is about 20ms average. It'll go down between 10 and 15. I feel like it should be better. I have an older asus monitor (75hz refresh using display port) and recently upgraded to ryzen 7 5700X, ram to 32 gb 3200mhz, and added 1tb m.2 to the 1tb sata ssd that's was already in the system. Is that 75w pcie power limit the same for all current motherboards? Maybe I'm just not understanding or aware of the physical limits of my gpu. I've seen power usage for 30 series cards reach around 350w. I know my card is a different series. Maybe my expectations are too high. 🤷♂️
@@laid-backgarage4412 The 75W is a limitation of the PCIE port and it is the same for all boards. If your GPU needs 200W of power then PCIE on your motherboard will supply 75W which the MoBo knows about since it goes through it but the rest of the power, 125W, go directly from the PSU through the 8-pin PCIE connector on the side towards the case. The GPU should be able to measure how much it draws overall but I don't think the motherboard would know.
Damn u got a 750w psu and im here building a pc with an rtx2070 and 5900x with only a 550w psu.. Should be enough right?
I would've preferred to see this with AMD motherboards because you could at least run the memory on the same speed and timings. Or for the test to use 2133 memory.
I concur o7
Hardware unboxed does this kind of testing all the time. Amd results are extremely boring. All boards are good.
@@Superiorer using an asrock ab350 board that cost me 50 bucks incl shipping brand new. Used it since my 1300 and now woth my 3600 still going strong, even with memory and cpu oc. Obvz i got no reference but im pretty sure thatll do to agree with you :D
@@D3nn1s is true asrock bios is uselles??
@@daviddimeglio5466 depends on what you mean by useless i guess?
I found it a bit hard to navigate, but its my first pc so no clue how it compares to others.
I was able to oc ram and cpu like i said no problem
"across the..."
Me: don't do it.
...
Me: don't do it!
Anthony & me together: "Board!"
Got a like straight away just from anthonys intro. You are awesome anthony
"Not every bios is created equally" *Cries in HP Omen*
HP has always had incredibly restrictive BIOS menus. Their business hardware is the worst offender by far
@@kennethparadis2733 Well, it bit them in the ass in my case. They advertise the current generation of HP Omen machines as having XMP RAM and being upgradeable, but the RAM doesn't run XMP profiles (only achieves 3200MHz through horrible JEDEC settings), XMP cannot be enabled in the bios, and if you put in any RAM other than the specific HyperX modules that HP ships, it won't run at 3200MHz at all. I learned this when I bought a machine with 16gb of RAM, and then got another 16gb of store-bought HyperX RAM (which looks identical, but apparently isn't) to take it up to 32gb. So I threatened to take them to the fair trading authorities here in Australia, and they rolled over and replaced my whole machine with a top of the line one with 32gb out of the box, more storage, and a better GPU at no cost to me. As to why I bought an Omen to begin with, I get VERY good prices with HP through my employer, and I was literally getting a whole machine for only a bit more than the cost of the GPU.
@@YetMoreCupsOfTea I have a HP Omen and noticed the same thing, tempted to just swap out the HP motherboard though and in theory everything else should just work…
@@Shoot231 I have heard of someone doing that, but in my case I just forced them to give me a machine with 32gb of RAM on threat of dragging them through the fair trading system here in Australia. Our consumer protection laws are no joke, and they clearly could tell they were in the wrong.
@@YetMoreCupsOfTea should've still taken them to it regardless lmao
an AMD motherboards test would be great to get recommandations for team red
Yes, please!
Yes, please
AMD doesn't pay good as Intel
No, AMD is boring. All b550 boards perform the same.
@@Superiorer and is it a bad thing?
Woah! You guys should do more board reviews in the future, that's some real awesome results. And please let Anthony do it!
We can answer this question just like any computer related one:
It depends
Hello there, I use arch btw
(Kinda, more accurately I use Garuda btw)
Linux Master Race
Got an upvote from me as soon as I saw your name, haha!
Very true
i use tw btw
I love motherboard content. Choosing a motherboard, back in the day, was a real challenge, given all the bleeding edge tech becoming available so rapidly, alongside all the proprietary feature sets many boards came with. Not so much any more, but I do miss watching JJ and Paul on NeweggTV spend an hour going over absolutely every feature of the latest Asus Deluxe board. These days an unboxing of enthusiast motherboards would actually be great, because I've found it hard to know for sure exactly what's in the box as far as accessories. I've seen boards that say "this feature requires such and such accessory" and shows the accessory pictured on the Newegg or Amazon page, only to find it doesn't come in the box. Frustrating.
Wow i feel the total opposite haha 🤣🤣
Back in the days there wasn't that much references and the top prices were 300ish only for a few and rarely pushing in the 400 maybe for 1 or 2 models...now...😶😶🙄🤣🤣
So to me it was kinda easier to choose as you hadn't have to play "where's charly" to find the very important difference that could change your entire life between 2 boards from the same manufacturer 😂
Sadly DFI is only making industrial boards now, hopefully EVGA's still around but isn't distributed in every country 😥
Go watch Gear Seekers! They do motherboard overviews and show everything!
Surprisingly had a pretty noticable improvement in Overclocking potential with a new ASUS ROG Strix Motherboard after my more budget level MSI Board failed. Now my 3000mhz RAM that was previously only stable at 2866mhz can run at even 3200mhz and my Ryzen 5 2600 went from stable at 3.7GHz at 1.3V to 3.8GHz at 1.3V making my overall experience just a bit smoother.
"There can only be one motherboard!"
Me with two really old pcs: aged together strong
Apes ?
TLDR: Buy a reputable motherboard that has the features that you need (number of USB ports, M.2 slots, SATA Ports, PCIe slots, etc) and don't worry about the fancy "gaming" and "extreme" monikers.
Great video!
Nah I bought a Strix x570f for that sweet sweet RGB 😃
And always check reviews if there are weak points.
Thanks :)
I buy whatever Buildzoid tells me to buy.
He said buy a MSI B550 Unify-X. I bought a B550 Unify-X.
He said buy dual-rank Samsung B-die. I bought dual-rank Samsung B-die.
(the B550 Unify-X is a full-featured ATX motherboard with 2 DIMM slots and ridiculous overclocking potential)
Just did that recently and ended up with a board that has "Gaming" in its name... (ROG Strix B550-A Gaming)
This is exactly what I wanted form a video about motherboards
Would love to see similar video about AMD too and some info on comparing this video to AMD.
I've always wondered this, and wondered why this hadn't been tested more already. This was great
A good question indeed.
But more importantly: Does your love for Anthony affect your performance?
Yes.
Said the actress to thw bishop.
Well now that there's pressure.. damn it.. never mind :-(
Yes
>.
Would definately like to see if performance varies similarly on AMD systems.
Should be similar in outcome, same principle applied
Hey guys, I think you should do a video on the consistency of board performance for boards made during the pandemic. Due to component shortages, counterfeit parts are flooding the markets. These parts can affect board performance and it would be interesting to see how well manufactures are monitoring this.
Become a member of Hardware Unboxed or Gamers nexus then ask them.
LTT is just fancy not too deep of any details.
I'd love to see a part 2 with an AMD cpu
Id love to see more Anthony! Like if you agree or don't and be shamed
@@technews5020 "Like if you agree or don't and be shamed" I hoped those comments would stop when 2005 Kids have grown up ..
Irrelevant
@@trashblob How when it was always the 20+ people writing these comments=
The startup intro of this video was legendary!
Can you do the same for AMD as well? The chips seem more efficient, at least than the 11900K, so that might change things a bit.
Efficient enough to be slowed down at win 11 and constant hardware issues? Sheesh, AMD is for poor people.
@@maemilev POV: you have no idea of anything
@@maemilev In what year are you living? Certainly not in 2021
@@maemilev Poor me with my 5900X and 911 GT3.
@@maemilev You need to check your facts. AMD has some killer CPUs out there, and I use Intel in my gaming machine currently. Especially the higher end AMD products. Surely you’ve seen them review them on this channel.
Anthony is a great presenter. I’m really looking forward to another no-frills, bare bones computer build video! My last build pretty much mirrored Anthony’s recommendation, we just need the right products in the market and another video from Anthony!
That's why the view ratios are so low
You should marry him if you love him so much
Anthony is the end-product of the collaboration of a lot of very talented individuals. For that matter, so is Linus. No denigration intended.
Never knew the intro is all I need
"Because your system needs only one CPU"
Me and my homies needing dual CPU systems for compiling
Me looking at my dual CPU server I use as a NAS, plex and rendering
me looking at my 4CPU opteron server...
Knock knock! Who's there? It's threadripper!
@@JamesErath my entire 20 core 40 thread 128gb RAM server cost less then a single threadripper chip, so I think I'll stick with it
@@BrumBrumBryn I didn't say it was cheap, just that it exists 🤷🏼♂️
0:01 😂😂 too good
07:52 Glad they remembered he has a theme tune this time!
Definitely interested in seeing more of this kind of video. I remember every time I've helped build a system the Mobo is always the least satisfactory part to choose because shy of having WIFI 6, and "is this the overclocking chip-set or not?" there often isn't a really good way to choose boards, especially if you're not planning to make much use out of some of the more advanced features.
I was told like a hundred times that I should get the OC board just bc I'm getting (got) an unlocked cpu. Even though I dont need OCing bc im not gaming on this, using it as a DAW machine. Should I waste my money on the $200 z590 mobo or go cheaper, despite having an unlocked cpu? It seems like only one person I spoke with had any sort of intelligence whatsoever, and told me that itd be perfectly normal to have an Unlocked cpu on a non-OC board. But ultimately I let all these ppl get to my head lol what do
Yeah love to see this same thing but with AMD chips
@@TheAbandonedAccount7 I mean, I kind of want to ask at that point then "well if you don't want the better VRMs and want to cheap out on the board, and you don't want to do any overclocking, then why don't you try to save the money on a K sku and just get the non-K instead?"
@XeroShifter See this is my thing, which is that lots of people doing this are just kids wanting to play their favourite triple A game and sometimes the kind of person that goes "I'll give you $200 to overclock my RAM" which sure, there's many advantages to PC gaming, but you eventually just start to go "I mean, you could consider a console, even though they suck." Everyone who builds a machine liek this is going to be using it as a computer for multiple purposes, and people are so damn shortsighted in modern Western culture top to bottom that it's like, even the question of questioning what they may need to use it for in the future never occurs to them. So like, you may be playing PUBG right now, but maybe you'll get into photo editing later. Or maybe you end up needing it to work.
I guess it's hard to explain concisely but just the sense of possibilities is there alongside problems you often don't ask when learning to build. I know it's the least glamourous seeming part (other than, PSU maybe?) but just like the PSU, it shouldn't be completely cheaped out on just because it is "boring" but you don't need to overspend either. I disagree with the logic that "if you didn't ask for this feature you don't need it" mentality because the now isn't later, and if you really want to understand this extreme stay on a Dell or HP prebuilt for years and years on end and then come back and tell me the motherboard doesn't matter. It's just hard when it's kids or old people, or otherwise someone so clueless they can't figure out the right question to ask and it becomes a bit of inference and guesswork.
But yes, generally you don't want to be stuck on a shitty 4pin EPS having, VRM or chipset heatsink lacking, 4 SATA port having, no third PWM pins locked down BIOS'd piece of shit for seemingly endless frustrating years of your life. I said this before and say it again, your motherboard is the one and only component you will likely never replace or upgrade. Even your power supply, might be that someday nVidia releases a 600w drawing literal meme, and you actually have to get a better PSU anyway. You'll likely get a new RAM kit sometime maybe, and you'll probably replace your CPU once and upgrade your GPU twice, on average, but you're probably never going to unscrew that board itself from your case from the very first moment you screw it into your standoffs, and if you ever do, it's just going to be to take the cooler backplate off, so no, I don't think you should cheap out on anywhere from 6 to 10+ years of its (and your) lifetime just to save an extra fifty bucks.
@@pandemicneetbux2110 right now k sku are cheaper than non
@@gormauslander lulz really?
Anthony delivering great work yet again is a solid way to celebrate Thanksgiving. But yeah, Happy Thanksgiving to everyone who celebrates it.
Happy American Thanksgiving.
(relieved Canadian turkey noises)
I could see a whole video with the intro’s style at the first 3 seconds of the video 😂😂
When I upgraded from B350 to X570, replacing no other component, I saw no effect in any benchmark except for the newer Assassin's Creed games where the improvement was shocking... I went from around 60 to 80 FPS.
probably only because your previous motherboard vrms sucked and wont allow full cpu boost
@@Tonyx.yt. why wouldn't that show in Cinebench, Geekbench, 3DMark, or any other game benchmark I could think of? It literally only showed in Assassin's Creed!
@@jasondailey9402 ac creed games are heavy on CPU about other stuff probably they don't last that long to show any differents while you spent much more time in games which means more load for your cpu
@@jasondailey9402 because it doesnt have pcie 4.0 it uses 3.0 so your GPU performance increased not cpu
@@jasondailey9402 because it would depend on a ton of setting in the bios, windows, etc.
This is a great video! Now one for Ryzen 5000 series please 😁😘
I Agree
Agreed, I really don't like Intel! And I like the cost of the AMD chips over the Intel processor price!
Said similar in another comment, I nominate x570 Tomahawk if they do Ryzen.
What's the point? Performance differences will still be minimal probably even moreso.
@@wanderingwobb6300 what's the point in any thorough testing of literally anything?
I loved the delay on the board pun. Made me giggle 🤭
Every time I see Anthony host, I get so happy for him. He’s grown so much and is such a key member of LMG.
I love all videos from Anthony, he could explain linux for full 5 hours and i would watch the whole thing in one go.
He _should_ explain Linux for five full hours, then I’d probably learn and understand enough to switch to Linux full time lol.
That was great info presented well. The ROI just not really being there on the expensive board was truly eye-opening. Thanks for the testing!
To me it was to be expected but I agree it was a very well done comparison. You've got to figure that they aren't going to do any excessive engineering for the higher end boards because it would cut into their bottom line.
Damn i love Anthony's energy and pun!
Love that brian gets his own theme song
9:23 that gigabyte board is summarising my life so well 🙂
I love that you can tell that there's car enthusiast writers and staff at LTT. I'd love to see a video one day on those who'd be willing touring their cars or Alex talking about his previous job if he's at liberty to do so.
I would love to see more board comparisons in the future for a given CPU
It's really nice that someone found a use for the 11900K!
I swear I can take whatever Anthony wants to sell me.
He is so wholesome
I have the MSI Z590 got it from amazon and it was after studying motherboards extensively. This pretty much confirms my studies. I am very happy to see that the money I spent was well spent. I also use good tower cooling and I just set it to water cooling to boost the PLM. I do sometimes get up to 75c but this is due to my case having terrible airflow. A few things about the MSI mobo he failed to mention:
It supports 2 M.2 Gen 3 and the casings to it's some of the best to keep temps low and they are accompanied by a thick plated thermal pad. A good case will drastically reduce your M.2 temps.
It supports up to 6 SATA AND 2 M.2 making it one of the few cases where you can have up to 8 different storage units without experiencing speed reduction. I use all but 1 of the storage and I can confirm it all works extremely well.
Another perk of the MSI Z590 is it has a built-in surround system, which lets you connect a surround system to its many audio ports on the back. It has a built-in USB C Thunderbolt 3 port that allows you to connect either 4 more USB 3.1 ports, 2 more SSDs, or use an external GPU is you happen to have one. It has tons of uses and few mobos have this built into them.
The main reason people buy a good mobo isn't for the performance boost but for these two things. To be able to use as many storage units as possible and to be able to use NVME without it getting too hot. (NVME are especially susceptible to dying when not properly cooled.) Then it's for the features. The MSI supports 2 ethernet ports, one is realtech and another is Intel both with unique ports, drivers, and functions. You will find the performance of Realtech and Intels ethernet ports to be unique and work differently with different CPUs and routers. It's perfect if you have fiber internet (I do) and want to get the most out of the speeds.
The MSI BIOS was by far the best I ever experienced, very user-friendly, and allows you to change all sorts of things. The MSI Z590 has multiple built-in capacitors that prevent you from burning out your CPU when you OC it. However, as he said nowadays burning out your CPU is far more uncommon.
I disagree with the Asrock, they are basically comparing pure performance, and as you can clearly see most of the mobos were performing almost the exact same. It's about features more than anything and if they did any real form of OC they will find the MSI outperforms by far the other mobos. I think they really missed a lot of key points about how a mobo can affect performance and the usefulness of a MOBO. For instance, you won't ever find a cheap 100$ or less mobo with 2 ethernet ports that work uniquely and 6 SATA and 2 nvme that work all at the same time with no performance drop. None exist. And that is why people spend the extra money for a 150-200$ mobo, to be able to use those extra ports! That's why I replaced my 80$ mobo with 4 SATA ports and 1 nvme for the MSI Z590 with 2 NVME and 6 SATA ports.
I'm very disappointed in this video, they are basically comparing apples to cellary and try to state comparisons that don't even make sense and are completely irrelevant to the situation. People don't buy an NVME for instance to get an FPS boost on their video games, they buy it to reduce load times. However, that is what this video is doing, basically, it's comparing multiple NVMEs to see which gives the greatest FPS boost in video games. Maybe you should make a video like that next? That's sarcasm by the way and I wouldn't be interested at all in a video like that.
We need test like these every year, there is so much value in those informations thank you
You only need 2 VRM's in alternating phases, just put a zip lock bag of water on top & make sure it doesn't leak. Then it'll cool them off & they can run as fast as they want.
I know the VRM problem too well. I had an AMD FX6300 until recently, with a crappy $50 Biostar mainboard that couldn't handle the overclock. Had to install an extra cooler blowing at the back of the mainboard.
Been waiting for a video like this. Thanks for doing the legwork!
Beautifully explained, my man Anthony! 👌
This is what I said on HUB's comparison of B550 boards when they launched last year: their comparisons using full load with Ryzen 9s were misleading because I daresay majority of people aren't using those CPUs and for vast majority of boards, Ryzen 5/7 will run perfectly fine. There is no need to be concerned about VRM temperatures just because a reviewer said they reached 110C using a Ryzen 9 3990X on Prime95.
I love how you start these Anthony, it's such a cool touch.
And your delivery on these informative videos is fantastic. Keep these videos coming!
love anthony as a host man
My ASRock Z370 Extreme4 has been a workhorse for me for years, overclocking my i7-8700K to almost 5 Ghz. No problems overclocking my memory either. Although overclocking was somewhat new to me, I found a youtube video how to set up overclocking for this particular board, and the settings worked like a dream. Never had a crash. At the time, the Z370 was highly recommended plus it came at a great price, well below the competition. Props to ASROCK.
check out hardware unboxed recent testing of motherboards. You wont be so happy with asrock. Older components are another story though.
@@crisnmaryfam7344 thanks for taking the time to make this comment but not telling what's actually wrong with them :D
@@crisnmaryfam7344 The overclocker champ that theyve featured used asrock. I like MSI personally but i've never used asrock
You taking pause at every sentence actually helps us in understanding and not overwhelm us
Let's go Anthony! It's always great to see him in new videos.
would have liked to see more ASUS boards in the lineup
@@Frank_Pods do they still boot-loop the first 2 seconds at startup? (after power disconnect)
i.e. 2s on, 2s off, on
sometimes even more loops depending on the board. Linus had one with 3 off cycles.
Agreed
I have seen a good large MB test for ages, good work LTT and nice work Micro center for funding this.
This man is so chill and very good at presenting his results. Love listening to him.
What i am wondering about: when a motherboard can have such an impact, even across only the expensive ones, how reliable are the comparisons between amd and intel cpus? Because often there are only small differences in numbers there.
You can really only compare complete system versus complete system, when the CPU types/brands are so different, as it forces so much else to be different too. You'd have to compare a *lot* of complete systems against each other, to see if there's a clear winner overall between CPU types/brands (and their corresponding supporting chipsets).
From what i understand here this is more important for high end CPUs.
If you wanna play on something like a Ryzen 5 3600 for example, the Performance differences between Boards are not that big.
You're the best Antony and everyone at LTT you guys rock. 👍😎
I used to have an asus entry level board equipped with an fx-8350 and it actually clocks down from 5.0ghz to 1.4ghz because of the VRM thermals
Bald with long hair is the best combo
LTT has the smoothest inclusion of ads of ALL the videochannels on youtube. Well done, as always.
"Because your system only needs one CPU" But...but what about those motherboards with two CPU's?
You forgot about the motherboards with 4 CPU's.
@@MirekFe those exist?
@@Fxmbro Oh yes. Usually they are made by Supermicro. Server motherboards.
@@MirekFe makes sense but damn.
@@Fxmbro ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I love this guy! His presentations are always so comprehensive!
Great test LTT! We appreciate the content!
Anthony you're the best tech dude at this whole network, where'd you go?
Her name is Emily now, she came out as transgender. She’s taking a break from being on camera for a while I think
@@Jaz_3001 His name is Anthony, wearing his mom's clothes doesn't change that
@@aaronerickson8878why does it bother you so much what someone identifies as?
@@Criispy___ I'm simply stating the obvious, why does that bother you so much?
ASRock has always seemed like a company that likes to make boards ready to be overclocked at a great price without all the marketing bs.
They may not have every single cutting edge bell and whistle, but I have not regretted getting mine.
my 10 year old cpu is still going strong with it ^^ (should maybe consider overclocking it at this point..)
You are a joy to watch and listen to :D
Thank you once again Anthony for a concise and professional review. You are still the man at LTT.
hehe
This guy always makes incredible videos
Not gonna lie, as somebody who is new to pc gaming and set up, going into a Micro Center for the first time was pretty cool. It’s like the Home Depot of computer stuff.
Interesting results I didn't factor my new motherboard into performance (I guess without videos like this there really is nothing to go on. I just upgraded my motherboard and CPU, ultimately budget/price difference won out over potential future expansion/slight performance advantages. I first picked up a Gigabyte Z590 paired with a 12600k, but ended up swapping it out for a similar B550 Mobo with a AMD 5600. It ended up being about half the price when factoring in needing to immediately add a beefy cooler to the Intel system.
Bruh I love this guy😂😂 he’s such a character.. I mean, they all are, but this guy 😂💪🏼
Anthony’s amazing, smooth review blesses my ears yet again.
How is it soothing if they have nasty loud sound effects and screaming in the video?
Anthony the GOAT
These type of comparison vids are always welcome....
what im asking myself quite a while now, are ATX boards considerably better than micro-ATX and other formfactors.
Thinking about doing a smallff build with an N200 case or something like that, since some cases can house cards upto 4090 sizewise and are easy to transport/the GPU doesnt sagg so much
Is this Linus 3 years ago ?
😭🙏