Asus knows how to make a decent board, of course, and uses the Z370 iteration as a loose blueprint for the £115 ROG Strix B360.
Intel is finally adding in a number of chipsets to support the latest desktop 8th Gen Core processors. Now with lower-cost options available, most notably B360, the chip giant is looking to meet the value proposition offered by AMD head on.
The B360 is a cut-down version of Z370, and its remit is to offer the same performance at stock speeds. It does so, according to our benchmarks, so what's the catch? Well, expansion opportunities are more limited and overclocking goes by the wayside. That's not great news to the true enthusiasts but makes a lot of sense for the guy or gal who wants a fit-and-forget DIY PC.
Asus knows how to make a decent board, of course, and uses the Z370 iteration as a loose blueprint for the £115 ROG Strix B360-F Gaming. It looks good; the new styling works well, and it's nice to see that solid audio, that excellent back panel and heatsink-cooled primary M.2 slot make the cut.
Bottom line: the Intel B360 chipset has been a long time in coming. More suitable for budget builds that eschew overclocking and massive PCIe storage, Asus, as expected, does a fine job for its interpretation.
The Good
The Bad
Integrated I/O
Good looks
Better value than equivalent Z370
Z370-like performance
No O/C potential
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The Asus ROG Strix B360-F Gaming is available from Scan Computers*
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