ASRock X470 Taichi Ultimate Conclusion

The ASRock X470 Taichi Ultimate’s focus is primarily on performance users with plenty of premium and high-end features to satisfy gamers too. This ATX sized flagship model from ASRock does have a lot of bells and whistles, but not the kind you would expect with the usual red and black themed gaming targeted model. Instead this is one that has one eye on trying to look as if it has style, whilst still appealing to what I like to call 'the RGB generation'.

The performance was generally average and consistent with previous testing, with the biggest positive showing come through system POST times and within our Handbrake video conversion benchmark. Everything else appeared to be consistent, with the exception of some rather questionable results garnered in our Ashes of the Singularity and Total War game testing; the same kind of results we found in our GIGABYTE X470 Gaming 7 Wi-Fi review. It’s not quite as bad as the figures yielded in gaming may suggest, and could perhaps be attributed to firmware infancy. DPC latency testing did prove rather positive and the audio performance displayed in our RMAA testing achieved the expected results. ASRock’s decision to omit any form of EMI shielding and any noticeable audio PCB separation may not give the impression audio is one of their key areas, but these features can sometimes be overemphasized by manufacturers as being a vastly superior when good quality component choice and circuitry play a more important role on overall performance.

The power delivery of the motherboard is overkill for most users. This likely contributed to our overclocking performance, with our Ryzen 7 1700 sample hitting 4.0 GHz, going beyond the 3.9 GHz mark we've been able to achieve on most boards. The X470 Taichi Ultimate displays a good showing on the overclocking front and it would be easy to see why an extreme overclocker may opt to go for this board over other offerings. The board also has an external clock generator for allowing adjustments to the baseclock frequency. An additional 4-pin 12 V CPU power input in addition to the standard 8-pin is also desirable as it allows the CPU to pull additional power at maximum load and frequencies when required.


The ASRock X470 Taichi Ultimate paired with the Cooler Master Master Liquid ML240R AIO RGB Cooler

For $300, the inclusion of an Aquantia AQC107 10Gb/s LAN port in addition to a secondary Gigabit LAN port powered by the Intel I211-AT controller adds an element of premium quality to what could be mistaken for its little brother, the X470 Taichi; aside from slight aesthetic adjustments to the heatsinks and covers. Another premium feature included are the Realtek ALC 1220 audio codec which can be configured through the included useful, yet primitive and basic looking Realtek HD Audio Manager.

While the ASRock X470 Taichi Ultimate has everything a top board should, it’s essentially the regular X470 Taichi with 10G Ethernet and on-board power and reset switches, which on the regular X470 Taichi, the circuitry can actually still be seen so it does feel like these two boards share the same PCB, but with minor differences and inclusions. Does the extra $70 signify the cost between the two boards? If the user is wanting to utilize the 10G LAN port then the price can be justified, but if that's not the case, the $70 saved on the regular X470 Taichi could allow for more budget to be allocated elsewhere, such as system memory which does scale pretty well with the Zen architecture, or a higher capacity SSD. 

The ASRock X470 Taichi Ultimate has a beautifully unique look with oodles of Polychrome RGB capabilities for a glorified light show and has decent performance to back it up. However if the Aquantia 10G LAN isn't a feature that's going to be taken advantage of, the $70 cheaper, going for the ASRock X470 Taichi could well and truly be the difference between opting for the better Ryzen 7 2700 ($299) over the Ryzen 5 2600X ($229) .

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  • crotach - Friday, August 3, 2018 - link

    I wonder why B350 and X370 perform so much better than the new chipset, the differences are quite substantial. Even power draw is lower, and the X370 chipset draws more power than X470!

    It must be all those christmas lights on the board :)
  • virpuain@gmail.com - Friday, August 3, 2018 - link

    A beautiful piece of hardware with the worst bios support. AsRock bios support is garbage, two months ago that board was in really bad shape because of that, the X370 Taichi they have yet to released a decent bios supporting 12 nm CPUs, and there are still a crapload of issues with 14 nm cpus with that bios.

    Just check asrock own forums and the Taichi thread on OCN.
  • WasHopingForAnHonestReview - Friday, August 3, 2018 - link

    My goodness. Im not sure if this comment section is all trolls or just self hating types, but wow is it annoying to read you girls cry about typos or grammar mistakes.
  • PeachNCream - Friday, August 3, 2018 - link

    It's annoying to read someone call people girls as if referring to us as female is an insult while at the same time not knowing our genders.
  • WasHopingForAnHonestReview - Friday, August 3, 2018 - link

    Exactly
  • Tchamber - Friday, August 3, 2018 - link

    You mention that none of these boards are optimized for DPC latency, yet they best most every Intel board you've listed. What kind of latency is noticeable? The last time I noticed it was in my OLD Core 2 Quad laptop.
    https://images.anandtech.com/graphs/graph12706/dpc...
  • Wolfclaw - Saturday, August 4, 2018 - link

    Drop the wifi and put in a couple oi USB2's for older stuff and a thunderbolt.
  • atomicparticle - Wednesday, August 8, 2018 - link

    Their hardware might be good but their bios team is just really B A D.
    FIY they can't even have a fix the basics like a proper "SAVE PROFILE" function that can actually save things on their now more than one year old X370 Taichi. The same board that still uses hexadecimal numbers for memory timings. The same board that doesn't have a functional clockgenerator. The same board have memory badwidth losses up to 20% if manual overclocking is in use.
    I understand every company is limited on resources but AsRock is just REALLY BAD at supporting their boards.

    What is worth a great motherboard with a crap bios ? AVOID ASROCK

    http://forum.asrock.com/forum_posts.asp?TID=8668&a...
    https://www.overclock.net/forum/27481658-post3765....
  • Dug - Thursday, August 9, 2018 - link

    And the things you listed should be tested under a motherboard review.
  • atomicparticle - Thursday, August 16, 2018 - link

    I was flaming them with a copypasta in their products so they would hear us because they have been ignoring us for months. Now they seem to be fixing their BIOS so there has been some progress with their bios support, if they keep it Ill stop flaming and even praise them in the future.

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