From personal experience, I would advise caution on boards with four DIMM slots. I'm not sure how much time and effort TPU put into true^TM stability testing but the gold standard is still Prime95.
I have an ASUS ROG STRIX Z790-E mainboard, i9-13900K CPU and 32GB of Corsair Vengeance DDR5-7200.
At 7200MHz and 1.48V, I was able to get this setup to "fake stability", i.e. I was able to run the Karhu memory test to ~12000% coverage but then still got errors in Prime95 (after two to three hours of testing). The Karhu folks are saying on their website that 6400% coverage catches 99.41% of errors. Um, well, yeah...
After lots of testing, I finally settled for DDR5-6800 at 1.46V. This was the first and only setting, working my way down from 7200MHz, that I was able to get Prime95 stable (~15 hours or so).
I have read quite a few user reports with similar experiences as mine. The 7000MHz barrier is a pretty tough wall to break on a board with four DIMM slots (on a two DIMM slot ASUS APEX it might be significantly easier to accomplish these clocks).
Be wary of "fake stability". Do not trust in one test only that might seem convenient and that appears to produce fast, pleasing results.
Invest the time and effort to test stability properly. Prime95 has always been and will always be the gold standard due to its methodology. If you get errors in Prime then there is something wrong with your system. Period.
You do not want to run a system with "hidden" stability issues. Some games are very sensitive to bad (RAM) OC, so to be on the 100% safe side that you have a crash-free system, make sure that your system is Prime stable. Yes, there are people saying that Prime loads are "unrealistic" for every day usage and all that blahblah... in reality most of those people simply do not like the results of their Prime95 testing
.