ASUS has published a list of its upcoming motherboards powered by Intel’s yet-not-announced Z390 chipset. As expected, the company will offer several families of platforms featuring over a dozen of models aimed at different market segments and supporting different features.

ASUS intends to offer Intel Z390-based motherboards across five families of its products. The top-of-the-range Z390 offerings aimed at enthusiasts and overclockers will be marketed as the ROG Maximus XI series. For gamers and enthusiasts ASUS will offer four ROG Strix Z390 mainboards in different form-factors. For gamers with lower budgets the company will release eight Z390 motherboards under the TUF and Prime brands. In addition, there will be a single Z390 Dragon mainboard that will be available only in China.

ASUS' Upcoming Z390 Motherboards
Form-Factor ROG Maximus ROG Strix TUF Prime Dragon
ATX ROG Maximus XI Apex ROG Strix Z390-E Gaming TUF Z390-Plus Gaming Prime Z390-A Z390-Dragon
ROG Maximus XI Code ROG Strix Z390-F Gaming TUF Z390-Plus Gaming Wi-Fi Prime Z390-P -
ROG Maximus XI Extreme ROG Strix Z390-H Gaming TUF Z390-Pro Gaming -
ROG Maximus XI Formula - -
ROG Maximus XI Hero
ROG Maximus XI Hero Wi-Fi
Micro-ATX - TUF Z390M-Pro Gaming Prime Z390M-Plus
TUF Z390M-Pro Gaming
Wi-Fi
-
Mini-ITX ROG Strix Z390-I Gaming -

The list of ASUS motherboards was published in a description to a new BIOS feature that was introduced on July 23. The advertised BIOS feature enables to create user profiles in BIOS and therefore better tailor PCs for particular users or use cases. The capability is supported not only on the upcoming Intel Z390-based motherboards, but also on existing Intel 300-series platforms from ASUS.

The fact that the world’s largest maker of motherboards accidentally publishes the list of its Intel Z390-based platforms indicates that the product family has been formed and the company is probably nearly ready to ship the products. Meanwhile, it is highly likely that Intel will launch its Z390 chipset along with its upcoming eight-core Coffee Lake processor*, so it is going to take a while.

*Unless Intel decides to repeat its 2014 launch tactics and release its new enthusiast-class class chipset a month ahead of a new enthusiast-class CPU (Z97/H97 were released in early June, whereas the Devil’s Canyon CPUs were launched in late June). The rationality of such tactics poses questions because Intel’s upcoming eight-core chips in LGA1151 v2 packaging are likely to be supported by various Cannon Point-based chipsets.

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Source: ASUS (thanks to our reader SH SOTN for the tip)

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  • Dug - Thursday, August 2, 2018 - link

    They are missing the boat for ITX. At least there is some MATX boards.
    But 19 different boards?
    If they spent less on product marketing for all these different boards, not to mention costs in different packaging, production costs for multiple boards, testing, etc. They could probably reduce costs significantly and still make customers happy with fewer choices. No one wants to spend the time looking up all the minor differences between all these boards.

    If anything make a "I want the newest features, but don't want all the gaming extravaganza to go along with it" motherboard.
  • florida wilson - Tuesday, August 7, 2018 - link

    I went through this post and the information provided by this is really informative. personally, I use the Asus brand and its feature is really nice and Asus Repair center is also worked great. the help in a very nice way. Anybody facing any type of technical issues then the can get connected to the Asus Repair Center Through https://www.asussupportnumber.com/asus-repair-serv...

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