Tuesday, February 5th 2019
At 1550€, ASUS ROG Dominus Most Expensive Client-Segment Motherboard
ASUS formally launched its Republic of Gamers (ROG) Dominus, the sole available motherboard option for Intel Xeon W-3175X unlocked quasi-HEDT processor. Cowcotland scored its price in the old continent to be a whopping 1,550€, making it the most expensive client-segment motherboard (at least in the past 20 years of PC history). Built in the SSI-EEB form-factor, this board is designed for overclocking the 28-core/56-thread Xeon chip, which is capable of pulling over 1000W of power (just the CPU) under extreme overclocking. The processor itself is priced around 3,100€ including VAT. Add a matching hexa-channel DDR4 memory kit such as these Trident Z Royal ones, and your platform cost could easily touch 5,500€.
Source:
Cowcotland
49 Comments on At 1550€, ASUS ROG Dominus Most Expensive Client-Segment Motherboard
prettysure I won't be adding this to my wish list of collectable hardware.....I'm with everyone else - ROG branding on this makes absolutely no sense - this product is going to be worthless for gaming and game engines will never "grow into" that many cores at such a low clockspeed.
Should have been a workstation branded board.
Remember the good old days when midrange was $250 or less, I remember when nvidia launched 8800 gt for less than $200 with performance close to their high end 8800 gtx $599.
www.extremetech.com/computing/284589-reports-tsmc-accident-destroys-tens-of-thousands-of-nvidia-gpu-wafers
It's all just a showcase of what company can do - like Bugatti Veyron for VW or Maybach for Mercedes.
But the box can't say "pointless product" or "just for marketing". They have to devise some use scenario for these electronics.
AMD says TR is a professional platform for creators. That's because they don't have any other product in this segment (EPYC is for servers).
Intel already has a platform for creators/scientists/analysts - Xeon does both that and servers. So they have no choice - their HEDT is named a gaming lineup.
This W-3175X is particularly weird because it's called "a Xeon", but it's actually just another HEDT monster - just this time on the server socket (because it wouldn't fit on 2066). Exactly. All kinds of electronics became a lot more expensive lately. We all think about phones, but notebooks also went up. Everyone has a $1000+ Macbook or Zenbook or Dell XPS. 10 years ago you could buy a well equipped, "business-class" notebook with Windows Pro for $700. Today you have to spend double that.
We're clearly willing to spend on electronics more than we used to. It's unrealistic to think PC manufacturers wouldn't notice.
....because hedt/core ount/additonal bandwidth/pcie expansion is pointless.
I think more accurate is the platforms are pointless to YOU...which is cool. :)
The remainder of the sales will be company-purchased rigs for people who've convinced a particularly dull boss that it will increase their productivity, and those people won't care about depreciation either because it's not their money.
It makes little sense to start with and even less at these prices TODAY, in 6 months it will look even worse.
@bug a few MONTHS not years to <1/2 is my estimate.
Intel just can't comprehend they got beaten by AMD, and I hope Zen 2 continues the trend...prices need to come down.