Promoção ASUS ROG STRIX X870E-E GAMING WIFI – Placa-mãe ATX AMD X870 – 24 Portas USB – 4 Slots de Memória – 192 GB Máximo








Preço: R$4.549,14
(Apartir de: Dec 12, 2025 16:33:14 UTC – Detalhes)
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ROG STRIX X870E-E GAMING WIFI
ROG STRIX X870E-E GAMING WIFI
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Especificação: ASUS ROG STRIX X870E-E GAMING WIFI – Placa-mãe ATX AMD X870 – 24 Portas USB – 4 Slots de Memória – 192 GB Máximo
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6 avaliações para ASUS ROG STRIX X870E-E GAMING WIFI – Placa-mãe ATX AMD X870 – 24 Portas USB – 4 Slots de Memória – 192 GB Máximo
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R$ 4.549,14
Vitor LYC4N- –
LYC4N- !
Sai de um Intel i7 13700k de uma placa rog Strix z790-h problematica, com problemas de time de memoria e muito problemas de tela azul, para a paz completa dessa placa mae e processador AMD 9800x3d, ganho de uns 20 % e a paz.pensei será que devo comprar a versao HERO?(ASUS ROG CROSSHAIR X870E HERO – Placa-mãe AMD X870)pesquisei bastante e minha conclusão é Não!! essa faz tudo que a outra faz.estou pra finalizar e comprar o GEN5 de M.2 e concluir a avaliação.ótima placa. recomendo.
Mohammed –
Wonderful product, product as described and works flawlessly. Bought it yesterday and I am super happy with it alongside my 9800x3D CPU.
Hakim Aldosari –
كواليتي جميل جدا لكن يبي تحديث البايوس مع معالجي (9800x3d)
S. Penning –
I recently upgraded my system to AMD’s latest X870 platform and chose the ROG Strix X870E-E Gaming WiFi as the foundation for my high-end build. Having worked with several flagship motherboards, I can confidently say this board is an absolute beast and worth every penny for serious builders and overclockers.Unmatched Power Delivery and StabilityThe main selling point of the X870E-E is its power delivery system (VRMs). This board handles the most demanding Ryzen 9 chips with ease. Under heavy synthetic loads and during intensive compiling tasks, the VRM temperatures remained incredibly low—something lesser boards struggle with. For anyone pushing modern CPUs to their limits, this stability is non-negotiable.Furthermore, DDR5 memory stability is rock solid. Initial setup with my 6000MHz EXPO kit was flawless; a quick setting in the UEFI and it booted perfectly with no fuss. This is a huge relief, as DDR5 can sometimes be notoriously finicky on new platforms. The Q-Release PCIe Slot button on the side is a small but brilliant quality-of-life feature that makes GPU removal effortless.Connectivity Built for the Next DecadeASUS didn’t skimp on connectivity, making this board genuinely future-proof.Storage: The sheer number of M.2 slots is impressive, including a dedicated PCIe 5.0 M.2 slot. This is essential if you plan on running the fastest NVMe drives available now or in the near future. The quick-release M.2 heatsink design makes installation incredibly fast.Networking: The inclusion of WiFi 7 and 2.5G Ethernet is perfect for low-latency gaming and high-speed local networking. Even if you don’t have WiFi 7 infrastructure yet, the capability is there, meaning you won’t need an adapter for years.Aesthetics: The subtle but effective $text{AURA}$ Sync lighting and dark, aggressive heat sinks look phenomenal in an all-black case build. The design feels premium, not overly flashy.Final VerdictIf you are investing in an $text{AM}5$ CPU (especially a Ryzen $7$ or Ryzen $9$) and intend to keep this system for many years, the ROG Strix X870E-E is the smart choice. It eliminates the guesswork regarding stability and provides all the performance, power, and high-speed I/O you could possibly need. This motherboard is a cornerstone component that delivers confidence and blazing performance. Highly recommended.
Jose Contreras –
Todo lo que esperas tanto de especificaciones como estetico. Solo recuerden que si van a usar los m.2 superiores el derecha con Quick Release es el que no quita lineas del PCI para la tarjeta 👌🏼
Bryan KB9YEN McWhirt –
I have used PC parts from most of the major manufactures. Some I have found to have equal build quality, but lacking in some other aspect. Normally horrible customer support or discontinuing product and not providing updated bios or drivers after that point.I have another Asus motherboard that runs my containerized applications. It’s an ASUS ROG Crosshair VIII Hero X570. Yes Asus makes workstation motherboards, but this was repurposed when I bout this new ASUS ROG Strix X870E-E Gaming WiFi board. I’ve been using it for about four months now and have had no issues*. No hardware comparability issues, and the default bios fan curves work great for me for a good balance of cooling and a low db noise level.The one complaint I have with every manufacture is their custom software. It would be a much better world if they all worked together to have a single dashboard for monitoring your system and keeping your drivers up to date. It would be even better if that project were fully open sourced. By that I mean the dashboard, not the drivers as many of those come from specific chip-set manufactures. That said the new Armoury-Crate dashboard application is far better than the one one that was originally available when I bought my older ASUS ROG Crosshair VIII Hero X570. It’s this type of continual improvement and listening to the community that in my opinion pushes Asus in front of the competition.While I do buy from Asus’ ROG gaming line, I do so because I need the performance their products in this line deliver. I primarily work in Blender3D and Blackmagic DaVinci Resolve Studio. With this new ASUS ROG Strix X870E-E Gaming WiFi board works great for that in Windows, I often do a god bit of my work in Linux. That is what the asterisk above comes in. This is not a negative on Asus, but rather the chip-set manufactures in that there are many things that do not work in Linux at this moment. For the most part Asus can only influence the manufactures to work with the Linux community, and at the same time they cannot only use parts that are Linux compatible because that would mean not using the newest and or best components available.As for Asus’ support, it’s good. Everything could always be improved, but in the few interactions I’ve I did not get someone asking me for information that I had already provided in my original request. This is an issue I’ve had with many other companies and I hope Asus continues with good support and taking feedback from the community and content providers like Linuxx Tech Tips, GamerNexus, Roman (der8auer) Hartung.If you are looking for a new motherboard, go to Asus’ website and use their comparison tools. This may not be the right board for you, but they certainly have one that is. Don’t hesitate to contact their support to ask question. The biggest reason people complain about a company instead of a specific product is they did not do enough research and they did not reach out to the manufacture for advice. If that manufacture doesn’t want to help you then move on. So far Asus has been helpful, even when they have had to tell me that my question, usually Linux related, isn’t something they can answer and that I’m better getting an accurate answer from that community.