ASUS X99-Deluxe Conclusion

A lot of positive remarks have been made about the styling of the X99-Deluxe. There has been no modern attempt to style white and black properly on the motherboard, and when taking the product out of the packaging it does feel like there is a touch of finesse to the product. This may be derived purely from the white strip down the left hand side covering some of the PCB and the rear panel and the consistency in the visual aesthetic. On closer inspection, it does come to realize that the white strip is plastic and only there for the aesthetic value, but to ASUS’ credit it does look smooth and proud.

The X99-Deluxe is the most expensive X99 motherboard in our first set of reviews at $400, and actually sits near the top of the entire X99 stack. As a result, it has new or exciting features coming out of every corner. We discussed the new features such as the OC Socket to help with overclocking, the vertical M.2 x4 slot for drives and the multi-GPU switch that lights up the PCIe slots where GPUs should be placed for 2/3-way gaming. Also included in the box are a Hyper M.2 x4 PCIe card for more storage and an antenna for the 3T3R 802.11ac module – the X99-Deluxe is currently the only motherboard with a tri-stream 802.11ac solution integrated into the platform.

The more usual bonus features include dual SATA Express ports, dual Intel network connections and Crystal Sound 2 which translates as an improved ALC1150 codec with EMI shields, de-pop circuits, PCB separation and impedance detection. ASUS has also introduced a fan extension PCB, supporting another three four-pin headers alongside the six already on the motherboard. This comes with an adhesive strip, allowing system designers to place the fan PCB near where it is needed. All the fans are DC and PWM controllable as well.

The performance of the ASUS X99-Deluxe is a little mixed. Overclocking results give it 4.6 GHz under 95C load temperatures, and audio results put it at the top of our X99 charts. DPC Latency is in the middle but still very good, with POST times around the 21 second mark similar to the other motherboards. Power consumption is also in the middle.

Unfortunately though the CPU performance at stock seems a little down compared to the others. We have tackled the issue of MultiCore Turbo previously at AnandTech, and the i7-5960X is odd that while it has a base frequency of 3.0 GHz, the 3.5 GHz turbo mode is quite rare and the CPU sits more happily at 3.3 GHz. It would seem that the ASUS X99-Deluxe does implement a form of MultiCore Turbo, although slightly less aggressive than some of the other motherboards. As a result, CPU performance at stock is a little down (1145 in 3DPM-MT vs 1271 for MSI). But, when overclocked, the ASUS seems to perform better than other motherboards (PovRay at 4.0 GHz, ASUS 3223 vs MSI 3121) so it does not come across as big worry – just place the system in TPU mode one and away you go.

It is easy to be impressed with the ASUS X99-Deluxe. Not only the design, but the BIOS, software and extra features all give it a boost above most of the X99 products on the market right now. Simple things like the XMP switch and the multi-GPU light-up LEDs improve the experience, while the bundled Hyper M.2 x4 PCIe card and 802.11ac 3T3R WiFi module give tangible benefits to spending over the average.

For the X99 launch, ASUS launched only two models to the North American market – this X99 Deluxe and the $500 Rampage V Extreme. The X99-A, X99-Pro and X99-WS are all in the pipeline, but it still means ASUS is focusing more on fewer motherboards giving time to improve each one. The argument from other manufacturers is that having more motherboards offers more choice, although if you want something like the X99-Deluxe, it is a polished product and hits the market it needs to with a wake-up call.

I enjoyed the X99-Deluxe. Most X99 users will too. Out of the motherboards tested today, it certainly deserves to be recommended for an i7-5960X build.

ASUS X99-Deluxe

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  • biostud - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    ASUS also has the X99-A at launch, at least here in Europe.
  • isa - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    Ian, thanks for a great job overall on this article. I especially appreciated your clarity on how the PCIe and M.2 configs work.
  • SanX - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    +1
  • SanX - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    Ian is on Liquid Nitrogen.
    The Monster-review :-)
  • icrf - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    Sounds like the Asus X99-A is the one for me. It keeps all the good stuff about the X99-Deluxe and saves $125. I don't need so many SATA or USB ports, I don't need wifi or dual GbE. I get the pile of fan headers and great sound, BIOS, and overclocking. Now I just need to know where the sweet spot is for memory count, speed, and timings. I suspect that's next on Ian's list.
  • Eyeshield21 - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    Great roundup review. ASUS is falling lately. Did you guys heard about the burnt motherboard that their X99 had? I wonder how many people have this issue.
  • The Von Matrices - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    So somehow you have determined it is a great roundup without even reading the first page?
  • The_Assimilator - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    This is a really poor anti-ASUS shill comment.
  • xunknownx - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    i have the MSI x99s sli plus and its great. its beautiful and feels premium. http://imgur.com/Q7u6qjD
    not sure why the article say its not for overclockers. i overclocked my i7 5820k to 4.6ghz easily and its running stable. i don't need so many extra ports or wifi. at $230, its a great value for such an awesome board.
  • jay401 - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    Because then you won't spend twice the price for a more expensive board.

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