ASRock launched two cutting-edge Z890 motherboards in sync with Intel’s release of the Arrow Lake-S chips. One of these mobos, the Z890 Taichi OCF, is designed for extreme overclocking, and it supports up to 128GB of non-ECC DDR5 up to and beyond 10,133 MT/s overclocked, according to the product pages. Aside from that, ASRock also launched the Z890 Taichi Aqua, which stands out by dropping all USB-A ports in favor of 10 USB-C ports on the rear I/O.
While ASRock has been around for over 20 years making motherboards and other components, it has always lived in the shadow of the big three — Asus, Gigabyte, and MSI. Thus, it has to find ways to make its products stand out from the competition. The company is doing this by pushing the possibilities of overclocking and allowing enthusiasts to squeeze every drop of performance from their high-end CPUs with the new Taichi OCF line of motherboards.
The vanilla Z890 Taichi motherboard could support up to DDR5-9200, but its OCF variant bumps this up to DRR5-10133+ via overclocking. ASRock says that the latest Z890 Taichi OCF combines its OCF series, known for its water-cooling prowess, and its OC Formula series, which is built for overclocking. This fusion makes the Z890 Taichi OCF the perfect motherboard for extreme overclockers. Note that the fastest retail memory available today only offers 9,600 MT/s, so ASRock expects users to achieve these speeds through their own experiments with tinkering and extreme cooling.
ASRock also launched the Z890 Taichi Aqua motherboard – which stands out from the crowd for an entirely different reason. It’s still designed for Intel Core Ultra 200S chips with support for up to 256GB of DDR5-9200, has three expansion slots (two PCIe 5.0×16 and one PCIe 4.0×16), and will accept two PCIe Gen5.0 x4 and up to four PCIe Gen4.0 x4 M.2 NVMe SSDs. However, what separates this board from the rest of the competition is the number of USB-C ports on its rear I/O.
The Z890 Taichi Aqua has two USB4 Type-C/Thunderbolt 4 ports, four USB 3.2 Gen2 Type-C ports, and four USB 3.2 Gen1 Type-C ports. It also has provision for two USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C ports up front, bringing the total number of USB-C ports to 12. And while you might be forgiven for thinking that it’s sacrificing USB-A ports, the Taichi Aqua still supports four USB 3.2 Gen1 Type-A and four USB 2.0 ports on the front I/O. This gives you a total of 20 USB ports, allowing you to connect as many USB devices as you want to your PC.
These new motherboards show how hard ASRock wants to be at the lead of motherboard design with their exotic offerings. Hopefully, the company can maintain its momentum, and keep a steady eye on quality and reliability, helping it to fight with the bigger fish in the pond.