It depends on what you mean, normal X299 boards in general or expensive overkill features? (like overkill VRM, etc.)
When it comes to reviews of Intel X299 and AMD X399, the reviews still seem to focus on overclocking. Don't get me wrong, there still are some overclocking fans out there, but the vast number of people considering these platforms will be workstation/power users. I wish reviews in this category also considered "workstation" usage. Most of these users will be doing editing, modeling or development, and gaming as well, but as a
secondary priority.
Some features which may be relevant for "workstations":
- Networking (10 Gb/s Ethernet is a
huge plus)
- Memory capacity and bandwidth
- Storage expansion
- Reliability
- Acceptable noise levels
etc.
Irrelevant features for "workstations":
- Overclocking
- WLAN (who runs WLAN on a $3000-5000 workstation?!)
- "overkill" audio. (Those who want good audio use an external DAC anyway.)
etc.
The reason why this board has an additional dedicated 10 Gb/s Ethernet plug is for hooking it up directly to a NAS, etc. It's not for
Internet