Featured

Gigabyte AORUS Gaming 3 X299 Motherboard Review

A Closer Look

The Gaming 3 is one fantastic looking motherboard. It has a black PCB with grey detailing to give it some visual flair. The blackened hardware is nice too, but that’s highlighted further thanks to the Armor metal work on the PCI and DIMM slots.

Of course, we’ve got the latest X299 chipset and the LGA2066 socket. It’s a freaking huge socket too, and will support the full range of Skylake-X chips, from the budget models, right up to the current flagship i9-7900 10-Core 20-Thread model. There are 8 x DIMM slots with quad-channel support, all fitted with Armor.

Power Delivery

Above the CPU, you’ll find a robust looking power delivery system. The chokes and caps are covered with a thick metal heat sink. Of course, all this hardware should allow for more stable overclocking, as well as clean power delivery for the CPU.

The power comes from a single 8-pin connector at the top of the motherboard.

Down the side, you’ll find dual USB 3.0 headers, as well as the 24-pin motherboard power connector.

Connectivity

Connectivity is pretty robust, with the usual ports all accounted for on the bottom row. There’s also a good amount of fan headers and RGB lighting connectors located on the motherboard. One nice added feature is an onboard power and OC button; unfortunately, no BIOS LED though.

Audio

SABER Hi-Fi is built-in, with a powerful DAC and some gold capacitors on the right side of a motherboard separator trace. We’ve heard great things from Gigabyte’s on-board audio in the past, so I’m confident this one is up to the job too.

There are five full-size PCI-e slots on this motherboard, with two of them featuring Armor to ensure even the heaviest of graphics cards are securely mounted.

Another nice feature is that shroud over the rear I/O, it’s a small touch, but one that really tidies up the aesthetics of any motherboard. Plus it looks like we’ve got some RGB lighting built into it too.

Around the back, you’ll find a good amount of USB 3.0 ports, PS2, USB type-C, and the HD-Audio jacks. There’s a single GbE LAN too, so that’s all the basics taken care of.

Around the back of the motherboard, everything looks pretty standard. However, the chipset and VRM heatsinks are mounted with screws, so you should be able to remove them if needed; could be handy for modders.

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Peter Donnell

As a child still in my 30's (but not for long), I spend my day combining my love of music and movies with a life-long passion for gaming, from arcade classics and retro consoles to the latest high-end PC and console games. So it's no wonder I write about tech and test the latest hardware while I enjoy my hobbies!

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

NZXT T120 RGB Performance 120mm CPU Cooler

Aluminum heat pipe cover discreetly hides copper piping 4 conductive copper heat pipes with Direct…

7 hours ago

Thermaltake Level 20 RS ARGB Mid-Tower Case

Stylish midi tower, space for mainboards up to ATX Two tempered glass side panels Rotatable…

7 hours ago

Akasa SOHO H4 Plus Premium CPU Cooler with Addressable RGB

Increased contact surface area allows for more heat to be dissipated at a time. Experience…

7 hours ago

Microsoft Shuts Down Redfall And The Evil Within

Honestly, I'm surprised that Redfall has managed to cling to life for this long at…

7 hours ago

Akasa SOHO 360 Dusk Edition Triple Radiator Liquid CPU Cooler with Addressable RGB Fans 

Premium 120mm fan featuring advanced blade technology, coupled with intelligent PWM speed control and vibrant…

7 hours ago

ASUS NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 24GB TUF Gaming OC Ada Lovelace Graphics Card

The TUF GeForce RTX 4090 OC brings powerful cooling and power delivery to squeeze the…

9 hours ago