Overclocking
Much like the ASRock X570 Taichi and ASUS Prime X570-Pro, the Gigabyte X570 AORUS Pro WiFi proved to have little headroom when overclocking. My Ryzen 5 3600X managed a maximum clock of 4400 MHz at 1.45 V stable, which is a 200 MHz all-core improvement over stock and not a bad result for six cores and twelve threads at under 100 watts.
The Gigabyte X570 AORUS Pro WiFi lacks a postcode display, which is disappointing, but it does feature debug LEDs. It also has a dedicated Q-flash button for recovering the BIOS in a worst-case scenario.
When it comes to memory-clock stability, the Gigabyte X570 AORUS Pro WiFi proved excellent, on the same level as the ASUS Prime X570-Pro. XMP was perfectly stable, and I was able to squeeze out 4200 MHz without touching voltages on my T-Force Xtreem kit. With this frequency, I was able to get into Windows and pass multiple loops of MemTest64 with no errors. I did run into issues after running my stability test and rebooting, so this may not be 100% stable. I also was able to push a little further, getting into Windows at 4266 MHz, a feat I hadn't previously managed with this kit.
Overall, the Gigabyte X570 AORUS Pro WiFi impressed me with it's memory overclocking potential.