What model are you looking for?
What model are you looking for?
Is this the real money? Or is it in USD? If we take it as USD, then the details look accurate. Considering this is likely the US dollar amount... The specs match what we expect. As for AMD options, if you opt for a Zen 3 chip, everything seems to fit well. For reference, PCPartPicker provides up-to-date pricing and availability for these parts. Total costs are listed clearly, including shipping and taxes. Regarding the non-WiFi version of the TUF Plus, it appears to be equivalent to the standard model. All these components can support at least 16 cores. The main question remains—what’s the issue here? Perhaps we should wait for the Zen 3 release before making a final decision.
For a budget-friendly option under $200, consider Asus TUF motherboards. If you need the 10700K, the TUF Gaming Z490-Plus is a good choice. With the upcoming Ryzen 5000 series launching soon, it’s likely to outperform Intel, making the X570 a better pick than the B550. Asus TUF Gaming X570-Plus
Additionally, the VRMs are insufficient in comparison to other boards and lack a solid metal block rather than a heatsink.
Initial standards indicate the 5600x will surpass the 10900k in single-thread performance thanks to IPC gains and faster clock rates
What initial standards were set? We’re still figuring it out, just observing and verifying. Where did this information come from? It includes 12 SIC639 units and can easily handle any current am4 chip. Since you mention the Aorus Pro is superior, it seems to have 12 doubled SIC651 units, making it only slightly different in terms of VRM. The heatsink on the Strix F looks adequate.