Testseek.com have collected 69 expert reviews of the Asus ROG Strix X570-E Gaming and the average rating is 86%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Asus ROG Strix X570-E Gaming.
July 2019
(86%)
69 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
With a carefully crafted selection of features and ports, the X570-E keeps all the best bits of the ROG enthusiast boards for gaming without the ultra-enthusiast price tag...
What Asus has here is a capable X570 board that we'd feel far more comfortable dropping a 12- or 16-core 3rd Gen Ryzen CPU into than the MSI X570-A Pro. It also has added aesthetic prowess, Wi-Fi up to the preferred 802.11ax standard, 2.5 Gigabit LAN, M.2...
Solid performance, Good power consumption, Removed USB 2.0 and PS/2 ports from the rear IO, 8x SATA 3.0 ports, SupremeFX audio, Understated appearance won't clash with other components
Appearance isn't as fancy as we'd like, Only 2 NVMe slots, Awkward to install NVMe drives
Compared to many launches from the ROG STRIX team, the X570-E Gaming's overall appearance is quite tame and understated, leaving the rest of the system and installed components to add flair. While that may work in the favour of some users, particularly if...
Published: 2019-07-07, Author: Peter , review by: eteknix.com
While ASUS make cheaper and more expensive models, I think the ROG STRIX X570-E Gaming is going to be one of their biggest sellers. Sure, it'll cost more, but it's got a lot of very usable features for overclocking, cooling, and connectivity that are sure...
Abstract: If you want to buy a new processor then you don't necessarily have to buy a new motherboard – older boards will support the new chips with a BIOS update.But, if you want an AMD X570 motherboard then there's loads of choice on the market, with high-end f...
Abstract: X570 boards have a lot of connectivity and bandwidth on offer and most motherboards swap these around for other features. Mostly in the mainstream space, people will rarely max out their motherboards and connections for I/O especially seems to be favored...