Saturday, October 22nd 2022

ASUS Announces More Intel Z790 ROG, TUF Gaming and ProArt Motherboards

ASUS today announced the availability of new Intel Z790 motherboards, including the ROG Maximus Z790 Apex, TUF Gaming Z790-PLUS WiFi and ProArt Z790-Creator WiFi - all of which provide DDR5 memory module support and PCIe 5.0 slots for video cards and storage.ASUS Z790 motherboards offer tremendous value to anyone assembling an Intel 13th Gen machine that includes AEMP II, AI Overclocking, AI Cooling II, PCIe 5.0 M.2 slots, Thunderbolt 4, WiFi 6E, Quick Charge 4+ technology and comprehensive connectivity. Overall, new ASUS Z790 motherboards are ideal solutions for any user who wants to build a next-gen machine or upgrade their existing system.

First up is the ROG Maximus Z790 Apex. The ultimate option for memory overclocking enthusiasts, this motherboard boasts a cutting-edge feature set. Then, for creative professionals of all kinds, ASUS offers the ProArt Z790-Creator WiFi. This motherboard offers premium connectivity and bespoke style, and it's fully ready for next-gen graphics cards and ultra-fast PCIe 5.0 storage. Finally, ASUS is bolstering its TUF Gaming lineup with the TUF Gaming Z790-Plus WiFi, which brings DDR5 support to the family.
Ascend to new heights with the ROG Maximus Z790 Apex
Overclockers know that Apex motherboards are primed and ready for record-breaking memory performance. The ROG Maximus Z790 Apex continues that tradition with its two DIMM slots ready to overclock DDR5 RAM up to 8000 MT/s. To make sure that users have all the tools they need for testing and monitoring memory, ASUS includes one-year subscriptions for AIDA64 Extreme and Memtest86.

The ROG Maximus Z790 Apex is already proving its mettle as an overclocking powerhouse—it's earned 14 world records and 13 global first place records. Overclocker Elmor used the Apex to take an Intel CPU up to 8,812.85 MHz, shattering a record achieved with an AMD CPU and held since 2012. Using an Intel Core i9-13900K CPU, overclocker lupin_no_musume was able to achieve a new DDR5 memory overclocking frequency record of 5564.8 MHz, which translates to 11,130 MT/s. That's nearly 2.3x faster than baseline JEDEC DDR5 RAM speeds. And safedisk set new records in both Cinebench R23 and SuperPi 32M, achieving 56722 points and 3 minutes, 4.054 seconds respectively.

Users may not have a liquid nitrogen pot in their shopping cart for their next build, but the Apex's proven overclocking performance will help ensure that they can run their high-end CPU and memory kit at fast, stable speeds.

This motherboard's robust power solution provides a high-end platform for exceptional performance. Raw power enters the board through 8+8 ProCool II power connectors. The solid pins in these connectors offer better contact with PSU plugs, improved heat dissipation and better reliability over common hardware. 24+0 teamed power stages rated for 105 amps deliver stable power to the CPU, and enlarged VRM heatsinks keep the circuitry cool under pressure.

For those using a liquid cooling loop to keep temperatures low, the ROG Water Cooling Zone puts them in command. The ROG Water-Cooling Zone's dual water-temperature headers and flow-rate header feed information straight into ROG's intuitive Fan Xpert 4 utility, letting users stay on top of the heat and stay cool in every game.

ASUS-exclusive intelligent controls make it easy for users to optimize their experience. AI Overclocking fine-tunes the CPU for high-end performance with just a couple clicks. It uses dedicated onboard microcontrollers to track temperature and frequency telemetries, and then it passes data through an advanced algorithm to overclock their system. AI Cooling II monitors the CPU and uses the data from its stress test to calculate the lowest fan speed required to effectively cool a system — while keeping noise levels low.

For those looking for a platform that will give them access to the fastest components of today and tomorrow, the ROG Maximus Z790 Apex offers a pair of PCIe 5.0 x16 slots ready for next-gen graphics cards. The PCIe Slot Q-Release button makes it a breeze to release a graphics card from the slot. Through the included PCIe 5.0 M.2 card, one can install a blazing-fast PCIe 5.0 SSD. Users will find two PCIe 4.0 M.2 slots, both with dual M.2 heatsinks with embedded backplates, and they can install two more M.2 SSDs through the DIMM.2 add-in card. The ASUS M.2 Q-Latch system lets users install drives without worrying that they might lose a tiny M.2 screw.

High-end connectivity rounds out the ROG Maximus Z790 Apex's feature set. Intel 2.5 Gb Ethernet and WiFi 6E give users fast wired and wireless networking. There is an ultrafast USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 Type-C port on the rear I/O panel, plus a header that makes it possible to connect another Type-C port with up to 60-watt Quick Charge 4+ support on the front panel of the case.

Jump into the fray with the TUF Gaming Z790-Plus WiFi
With a TUF Gaming motherboard, users know that they are getting essential gaming features, battle-hardened reliability and an understated aesthetic that fits in a wide range of builds. Now they are also getting DDR5 memory module support with the introduction of the TUF Gaming Z790-Plus WiFi.

This board is ready for action with the latest 13th Gen Intel Core CPUs with an upgraded power solution. It boasts 8+8 ProCool II power connectors, and its 16+1 DrMOS power stages—up from the 14+1 arrangement in the TUF Gaming Z690 family—augment the VRM's ability to deliver stable power while staying cool under pressure.

The TUF Gaming Z790-Plus WiFi features the ASUS PCIe Slot Q-Release button, which makes it easy to remove a graphics card, even if it is a high-performance option with a thick cooling solution and a hefty backplate. AEMP II makes it easy to optimize DDR5 modules for exceptional performance—just a couple of clicks in the BIOS enables the memory profile, then users have stable RAM speeds up to 37.5% faster than baseline DDR5 specs.

A PCIe 5.0 x16 slot lets users access the fastest graphics cards of today and tomorrow. Four onboard M.2 slots, three for PCIe 4.0, make it easy to set up a large and speedy gaming library. Networking comes courtesy of an Intel 2.5 Gbps Ethernet controller, and an Intel WiFi 6E radio lets users connect to a compatible router over the wide-open 6 GHz band in selected regions. A suite of USB ports, including a speedy USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C port on the rear I/O panel, lets users connect all their favorite gaming peripherals.

For those looking to complement their TUF Gaming motherboard with an array of components and peripherals with the same aesthetic, the TUF Gaming Alliance is a collaboration between ASUS and trusted PC component brands to ensure compatibility across a wide range of parts, such as PC cases, power supplies, CPU coolers, memory kits and more. With new partnerships and components being added regularly, the TUF Gaming Alliance will continue to grow even stronger.

The ProArt Z790-Creator WiFi calls to creators
Users building a content-creation machine ready to harness a 13th Gen Intel CPU need look no further than the ProArt Z790-Creator WiFi. With a sophisticated style rooted in clean lines, graceful angles, and precise symmetry—and a cutting-edge feature set—this is the motherboard they are looking for.

For those with creative workflows that scale with high-end memory kits, the ProArt Z790-Creator WiFi accelerates projects with the massive bandwidth, lightning-quick speeds, and exceptional power efficiency offered by next-generation DDR5 RAM. With data rates 50% faster than previous-generation DDR4 memory, DDR5 unleashes a new tier of performance, and this motherboard offers a host of hardware and firmware optimizations that enable users to overclock capable kits to the absolute limit.

With PCIe 5.0 connectivity, the ProArt Z790-Creator WiFi gives users access to the fastest next-gen graphics cards. This motherboard boasts two PCIe 5.0 x16 slots. They can operate in an x8/x8 configuration so that users can take full advantage of a pair of graphics cards. Four onboard M.2 slots let users set up a speedy storage array.

Users will also find a comprehensive selection of high-speed ports ready to connect their full creative workstations. A versatile pair of Thunderbolt 4 USB Type-C ports on the rear panel give users many options for connecting peripherals and displays. Flexible front-panel connectivity is essential for many workflows, so the ProArt Z790-Creator WiFi offers a front-panel USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 connector with support for up to 60-watt Quick Charge 4+. Pairing this motherboard with a case featuring a front-panel USB Type-C port will ensure that users have convenient access to 60-watt charging.

High-end networking options keep users productive. With a compatible router, this motherboard's WiFi 6E radio lets people tap into the freshly opened 6 GHz spectrum in select regions for truly unhindered wireless connections. Intel 2.5 Gbps Ethernet provides rock-solid and reliable wired networking, while a Marvell AQtion 10 Gbps Ethernet port opens up even more options, such as connecting to blazing-fast network-attached storage.

For images and more details about specifications for the new ROG Maximus Z790 Apex, TUF Gaming Z790-Plus WiFi and ProArt Z790-Creator WiFi, please check the Edge Up article. The entire lineup of ASUS Z790 motherboards can be found in the Edge Up Buyer's Guide, or visit the ASUS Z790 landing page for first-look videos of each series. ASUS has also scheduled a livestream on YouTube for October 20 that will be broadcast simultaneously on its Twitter and Facebook pages, with in-depth information on its full Z790 lineup and an introduction of these three new models. Then a second livestream on October 21 will provide a deep dive into AI Overclocking and DDR5 XMP on ASUS Z790 motherboards powered by Intel 13th Gen processors.
Source: ASUS
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30 Comments on ASUS Announces More Intel Z790 ROG, TUF Gaming and ProArt Motherboards

#1
ThrashZone
Hi,
Apex turned into a rgb nightmare :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#3
fluxc0d3r
Avlinthe apex is now entry class level kikoolol era, what a decline…

for the puppies not understanding why, this was golden era mb style look this :

www.techspot.com/review/179-dfi-lanparty-x58-motherboards/

www.comptoir-hardware.com/actus/cartes-meres/7317-lancement-officiel-de-la-asus-p6t7-ws.html
Totally agree. DFI was fire back then, rock solid board with design elements that stood apart from the all black boards that you see too much these days.

It was a sad moment when I realized my DFI P55 board was going to be their last consumer board. Amazing looking board even til this day.
Posted on Reply
#4
cvaldes
You guys know that you can turn off ASUS Aura if you don't want it, yes?

Probably less of a hassle to ASUS just to include aRGB rather than to make a separate non-RGB SKU with a different BOM, packaging, manual, etc.

Less headaches for the retailer as well. They have to keep both SKUs available; as soon as one model sells out, they know they will get complaints from prospective customers who are upset to see it out of stock.
Posted on Reply
#5
Dirt Chip
TL;DR: too expensive. Choose z690.
Posted on Reply
#6
RandallFlagg
Honestly I like the Asus Aura.

I set mine so all the lights are green when the CPU is under 65C, turn yellow from 65C-85C, and red at 85C+.

That said I don't see any substantial difference between the Z790 and Z690 Asus TUF.
Posted on Reply
#7
Nanochip
No Formula for z790 ? That’s TUF.
Posted on Reply
#8
BorisDG
Maximus Apex the new TUF Sabertooth?
Posted on Reply
#9
SOAREVERSOR
fluxc0d3rTotally agree. DFI was fire back then, rock solid board with design elements that stood apart from the all black boards that you see too much these days.

It was a sad moment when I realized my DFI P55 board was going to be their last consumer board. Amazing looking board even til this day.
I liked Abit and I miss them.
Posted on Reply
#10
Why_Me
Looking at the price of the DDR4 version of the Z790 TUF Gaming on Newegg this DDR5 version will be $300+ which means unless you're someone who is sold on Asus boards only it's going to get stomped in sales by the less expensive MSI Z790 Pro.

www.msi.com/Motherboard/PRO-Z790-A-WIFI
Posted on Reply
#11
RandallFlagg
Why_MeLooking at the price of the DDR4 version of the Z790 TUF Gaming on Newegg this DDR5 version will be $300+ which means unless you're someone who is sold on Asus boards only it's going to get stomped in sales by the less expensive MSI Z790 Pro.

www.msi.com/Motherboard/PRO-Z790-A-WIFI
Or just get this at Best Buy. But keep in mind there is no BIOS flashback button and it will need updated BIOS for Raptor Lake - so you have to have an Alder Lake sitting around :

Posted on Reply
#12
Gmr_Chick
cvaldesYou guys know that you can turn off ASUS Aura if you don't want it, yes?
I'm in the pro-RGB camp myself. I usually just like to keep a red and white (closest thing to silver) lighting scheme, but sometimes it's just fun to play around with the lighting colors and see what you can come up with! And I'll take RGB lighting over the older cold cathode tubes any day of the week!
Posted on Reply
#13
Chaitanya
Avlinthe apex is now entry class level kikoolol era, what a decline…

for the puppies not understanding why, this was golden era mb style look this :

www.techspot.com/review/179-dfi-lanparty-x58-motherboards/

www.comptoir-hardware.com/actus/cartes-meres/7317-lancement-officiel-de-la-asus-p6t7-ws.html
Also it will automatically install Shitsus bloatware- Armory crate unless user disables it in BIOS. I remember Lenovo faced heat for similar autoinstalling of snapfish on their laptops while Shitsus gets praises for its "products", and none of "reviewers" point this out.
www.asus.com/support/FAQ/1043788/
Posted on Reply
#14
Chrispy_
The TUF will be too cheaply-made and the other two will be too expensive.
Posted on Reply
#16
TheLostSwede
News Editor
CallandorWoTwww.asus.com/Motherboards-Components/Motherboards/TUF-Gaming/TUF-GAMING-B660M-PLUS-WIFI-D4/

@TheLostSwede do you by any chance know if the motherboard above has 12k japanese black caps? the caps are black in color, but I can't see anywhere if it says 12k caps or if its standard 10k caps. if you don't know, its cool, i just am curious
No idea, sorry.
A lot of components come in multiple colours these days, just so they can fit the board "theme".
The Swedish Asus page (which is mostly in English) has some more details.
Claims 5k hours.
www.asus.com/se/Motherboards-Components/Motherboards/TUF-Gaming/TUF-GAMING-B660M-PLUS-WIFI-D4/
Posted on Reply
#17
mclaren85
Why there is only 3 ram slots in the rog? Quite unorthodox
Posted on Reply
#18
ThrashZone
mclaren85Why there is only 3 ram slots in the rog? Quite unorthodox
Hi,
There is two slots for memory on the apex the third is dimm_2 for a m.2 rog card
Tuf board has 4 dimm slots.
Posted on Reply
#19
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
I want to see more motherboards like the ProArt board with DisplayPort inputs so you can use Thunderbolt the way it's meant to be used. I need something like this if I want a tower that can drive my LGUF displays.
Posted on Reply
#20
WhateverAnotherFreakingID
Avlinthe apex is now entry class level kikoolol era, what a decline…

for the puppies not understanding why, this was golden era mb style look this :

www.techspot.com/review/179-dfi-lanparty-x58-motherboards/

www.comptoir-hardware.com/actus/cartes-meres/7317-lancement-officiel-de-la-asus-p6t7-ws.html
Proud owner here of a pt6t7 ws , this thing still runs. It had run for work and gaming, sometimes 24/7. Upgraded the CPU from a 920 to a Xeon X5675 for 29€ recently and maybe next year, if prices are going to get decent again then I'm gonna retire it.
Posted on Reply
#21
tabascosauz
ChaitanyaAlso it will automatically install Shitsus bloatware- Armory crate unless user disables it in BIOS. I remember Lenovo faced heat for similar autoinstalling of snapfish on their laptops while Shitsus gets praises for its "products", and none of "reviewers" point this out.
www.asus.com/support/FAQ/1043788/
If you consider "autoinstall" = user actively clicks YES on a dialog box, then sure...when will this misinformation end?

It doesn't install anything without user consent. Have you even used an Asus board with Armoury Crate? It doesn't work that way on Strix, TUF or ROG.

It takes a bit of digging to find the Armoury Crate setting, but that's also what the BIOS search function is for......oh yeah, Gigabyte and ASRock don't even know what that is. And AURA is smack dab at the top of the BIOS screen, disable all LEDs on the board if you want.
Posted on Reply
#22
cvaldes
tabascosauzIf you consider "autoinstall" = user actively clicks YES on a dialog box, then sure...when will this misinformation end?

It doesn't install anything without user consent. Have you even used an Asus board with Armoury Crate? It doesn't work that way on Strix, TUF or ROG.

It takes a bit of digging to find the Armoury Crate setting, but that's also what the BIOS search function is for......oh yeah, Gigabyte and ASRock don't even know what that is. And AURA is smack dab at the top of the BIOS screen, disable all LEDs on the board if you want.
This is correct. You must accept the Terms and Conditions of the software license for the initial installation. ASUS Armoury Crate requires opt-in approval.

While the BIOS won't try to auto-download the installer, MSI Center (formerly Dragon Center) is the same. Opt-in approval is required.

I believe major updates to these software packages might require re-approval of the T&C. If the T&C change that also requires a new confirmation from the end user.
Posted on Reply
#23
bonehead123
ALthough I like the overall design of the apex, minus the rainbow circus pukefest of course, but regardeless, I aint paying scalper's prices just for a new gen board, asus or otherwise.....

Yea Yea I know all about the thicker layers, heavier traces, larger vrms and all that, but still, the mfgr's needz get to their collective heads out of their collective arses and put prices back closer to pre-pandemic levels or they can just BMA :)
Posted on Reply
#24
Prima.Vera
Question:
Isn't it true that if you use a PCI-E 5.0 nvme M-2 SSD drive, then your GPU cannot use the PCI-E 5.0 slot at full speed and can only be used as PCI-E 4.0x16 ?
Posted on Reply
#25
Terronium-12
Somehow, I didn't notice this until now. I haven't seen a white motherboard since the Sapphire PURE.
Posted on Reply
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