The ASUS X399 ROG Zenith Extreme Motherboard Review: Top Tier Threadripper
by E. Fylladitakis on July 17, 2018 10:30 AM EST- Posted in
- Motherboards
- Gaming
- Asus
- ROG
- Overclocking
- ThreadRipper
- X399
Board Features
ASUS designed the ROG Zenith Extreme to be the most feature-packed AMD X399 motherboard for Ryzen Threadripper processors available. The company's engineers had to use an E-ATX motherboard layout to fit everything and even that was not enough, as they were forced to move two of the M.2 slots to a vertical daughterboard and reduce the SATA ports to six. Despite these sacrifices, the ASUS X399 ROG Zenith Extreme is the most feature-packed motherboard that we have reviewed to this date.
ASUS X399 ROG Zenith Extreme | |
Warranty Period | 3 Years |
Product Page | Link |
Price | Link |
Size | E-ATX |
CPU Interface | TR4 / SP3r2 |
Chipset | AMD X399 |
Memory Slots (DDR4) | Eight DDR4 Supporting 128GB Dual Channel Up to 3600+ MHz |
Video Outputs | N/A |
Network Connectivity | 1 × ASUS AREION 10Gbit 1 x Intel I211-V 1 x Atheros QCA9008 AC+AD |
Onboard Audio | Realtek S1220 |
PCIe Slots for Graphics (from CPU) |
4 × PCIe 3.0 (×16 / ×8 / ×16 / ×8) |
PCIe Slots for Other (from PCH) |
1 × PCIe 2.0 (×4) 1 × PCIe 2.0 (×1) |
Onboard SATA | Six, RAID 0/1/5/10 |
Onboard SATA Express | None |
Onboard M.2 | 3 × PCIe 3.0 (×4) |
Onboard U.2 | 1 × U.2 Connector (×4) |
USB 3.1 Gen 2 | 1 × Type-C + 1 × Type-A (Rear panel) 1 × Type-C (via headers) |
USB 3.1 Gen 1 | 8 × Type-A Rear Panel 4 × Type-A via headers |
USB 2.0 | 2 × via headers |
Power Connectors | 1 x 24-pin ATX 1 x 8-pin CPU 1 x 4-pin CPU |
Fan Headers | 1 x CPU (4-pin) 1 x Pump/Aux (4-pin) 4 x System (4-pin) 3 x System (4-pin) on supplied Extension Card |
IO Panel | 8 x USB 3.0 (USB 3.1 Gen 1) 1 x USB 3.1 Type-A 1 x USB 3.1 Type-C 1 x Network RJ-45 3 x Antenna connectors 5 x 3.5 mm Audio Jacks 1 x Optical SPDIF Out Port 2 x Clear/Flashback CMOS button(s) |
Some of the features, such as the 802.11ad WiGig support and LN2-specific hardware options, are unique to this Ryzen Threadripper motherboard at the time of this review. The price tag of the ASUS X399 ROG Zenith Extreme is hefty, retailing at over $500 at the time of this review, and yet it does not seem unreasonable with such a features list.
In The Box
We get the following:
- USB Flash Drive with Drivers & Software
- User's manual
- Sheet with numerous ROG stickers
- Sheet with 10 cable labels
- Metal ROG badge
- ROG coaster
- M.2 DIMM 2 vertical board
- ASUS AREION 10G PCIe ×4 LAN adapter
- Three black SATA cables
- WiGig 802.11ad antenna
- 2T2R dual-band Wi-Fi antennas
- ROG VGA Holder
- Three thermocouples
- Extension Cable for RGB strips (80 cm)
- Extension cable for Addressable LED
- SLI/Crossfire Bridge (2-3-4 Way)
- Fan Extension Card (3 x 4-pin fan out)
- Fan Extension card screw pack
- Fan Extension card cable
- Case connector quick plug
The bundle of the ASUS X399 ROG Zenith Extreme is rich, as expected from a motherboard of this class. Besides the standard manual and a lot of stickers/cosmetic items that include even a (cardboard) drink coaster, we also found three SLI/Crossfire bridges for any possible (2-way, 3-way, or 4-way) SLI/Crossfire configuration, extension cables for RGB LED strips, a metallic support for PCIe cards, and antennas for the Wi-Fi/Bluetooth/WiGig interfaces. ASUS supplies the drivers and software into a USB flash disk instead of an optical disk, which is a reasonable move nowadays that many users are not using optical drives at all. Furthermore, ASUS supplies a "fan extension card" that adds another three fan headers if the six onboard headers are not enough for someone, plus three thermocouples that can be placed anywhere.
The ROG AREION 10G PCIe ×4 card is an interesting part of the bundle. Although it is based on the well-known AQUANTIA AQC107 chipset that other manufacturers are using as well, the PCIe card has a very large heatsink attached to it. Besides the AQC107 chipset, we only found a couple of clock generators and passive components on the AREION 10G card, components that do not warrant any kind of cooling. The AQC107 chipset on other motherboards that we have previously reviewed never had any additional cooling. We are unsure what drove ASUS's engineers to install a heatsink on the AREION 10G card, especially such a hefty one that is enough to keep cool a low-power CPU.
Despite the otherwise overwhelming bundle, ASUS does not supply any cable straps and only three SATA cables are included. There is no I/O shield pictured because it is permanently attached to the motherboard itself.
25 Comments
View All Comments
Meaker10 - Tuesday, July 17, 2018 - link
It's going to struggle to deliver power to 32 cores though.Chaitanya - Tuesday, July 17, 2018 - link
which is why expect to see a refreshed X399 boards from all vendors with launch of Threadripper 2.SodaAnt - Tuesday, July 17, 2018 - link
Small as it is, the VRM fan should help a lot with that.Oxford Guy - Thursday, July 19, 2018 - link
Meanwhile, ASUS showed up on the market with a hybrid air-water VRM solution back in 2013. We're supposed to get excited for teeny-tiny fans and rainbow LEDs — for a board that has stupid liquid nitrogen features. Yeah, water cooling is just so esoteric in comparison.Gothmoth - Saturday, July 21, 2018 - link
Nonsense... The VRM is fine for the 32 core threadripper 2.plonk420 - Monday, July 23, 2018 - link
*OCing on 32 cores :Peva02langley - Tuesday, July 17, 2018 - link
ROG? ROG!!!? I thought AMD was AREZ now.Asus, please explain to me how it makes sense... I am buying an AMD AREZ card, however I am using an AMD ROG motherboard. I am so confused... you were the one telling me I was too dumb to understand what I was buying, so you had to simplify it for me... and now I am just more confused than I was.
Congratulation Asus, you are making sense.
jordanclock - Tuesday, July 17, 2018 - link
AREZ was started because of Nvidia's GPP. Some manufacturer's, like Asus, took the route of making entire new brands for AMD, not just for GPUs. But because Nvidia finally caved and gave up on GPP, AREZ is no longer necessary.But you probably already knew that and know that AREZ/ROG has nothing to do with compatibility.
The Chill Blueberry - Wednesday, July 18, 2018 - link
AREZ is for Radeon; AMD is still ROG.jabber - Tuesday, July 17, 2018 - link
Would anyone who would buy such a board even bother to use the USB stick with what will be out of date drivers and added value junk on it anyway? Waste of time with USB or DVD/CD. Like driver disks in GPU boxes.