ASUS ROG Maximus X Formula review

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Introduction

ASUS ROG Maximus X FORMULA motherboard
An incredibly stylish and feature rich Z370 mobo

We review the lovely looking ASUS ROG Maximus X Formula, a € 419,- costing Z370 motherboard with intricate style for the enthusiast PC DIY crowd. It has distinguishing looks, an awesome OLED display and some of the most spectacular looks thanks to a very erudite RGB LED system. The motherboard has been fitted with all kinds of gear, AC WIFI next to the Gigabit Ethernet jack, you may house two M.2 SSDs. But moreover, the motherboard oozes design as it is one of the most beautiful products you will ever observe thanks to a fantastic Aura Sync RGB system and OLED information display. Also, an EK water block covers the VRM area, now you can just leave it passive, or add it to your liquid cooling loop as well, of course.

Coffee Lake represents the new 8th generation desktop processors from Intel, including the new mainstream six-core part. A product line that is the direct answer to, and effect from what AMD has been pursuing aggressively in the desktop processor channel. With this first 'mainstream' step from Intel, they will offer 6-core processors. These will need to be paired with a new motherboard chipset and thus motherboard, the Z370 based ranges. With the introduction of Ryzen and more recently the announcement of Threadripper processors, the processor market and channel has been turned upside down, and Intel is slowly waking up from its S3 deep-sleep state finally realizing that they cannot keep serving just quad-core processors in the mainstream, as they have been doing for subsequent years now. AMD gave Intel a serious wake-up call and as such, they needed to step up, significantly. Intel’s primary processor business has been releasing and refreshing quad-core processors for many years combined with high-margin, spicy priced E type (e.g. Broadwell-E / Haswell-E / Skylake-X) processor releases every now and then. You can't really blame Intel either as there simply was no competition - hence they had no rush and have been relaxed all the way for years now. Intel did anticipate Zen (or Ryzen), but the AMD consumer aimed Threadripper 16-core and Naples server segment 32-core made Intel step up its game a notch as they've shifted into a higher gear ever since Ryzen was released. Over the summer Skylake-X processors have been announced with limited releases and availability for the highest core count procs. Skylake-X, however, is available in good quantities for the 10-core and 12-core parts, but these start at 999 Euros for the 10-core version. There is an Intel Core i7-7800X hexa-core available in the sub-400 Euro range though, but it needs to be tied to an X299 motherboard, but these start at 350 euros. Ergo, AMD is outflanking Intel in any and every product segment, price wise. This now changes with the Coffee Lake generation of processors that have up-to six-cores alongside more affordable Z370 motherboards
 

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In this review, we look at the ASUS ROG Maximus X Formula. Positioned in a more high-end region it has distinctive black looks, an incredible RGB LED system with an OLED screen displaying system information as well. Have a peek and then let's head onwards into the review my man.  

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