ASRock & Fatal1ty: One of the Original Gaming Partnerships

The eSports boom didn’t just appear out of nowhere as competitive online gaming has been around for decades. One could (ed: but shouldn't) attribute the rise of eSports to the retired professional gamer, Johnathan ‘Fatal1ty’ Wendel. John won a number of competitions in the early 2000s, with over half a million dollars in prize money from twelve major competition wins in games such as Quake III and Unreal Tournament 2003.

His rise to fame is a predominant result of his skill and has been featured in mainstream media including the New York Times and Time Magazine. While he’s officially retired from competitive gaming, his branding and image as a champion live on through his Fatal1ty Inc. brand, one that is instantly recognized (ed: or confused) with winning. The Fatal1ty Inc brand curtails his gaming days through brand licensing which is more likely to be a bigger earner than his competitive gaming days; he still regularly makes the top-10 of the richest online gamer lists with an unknown worth, but he has been a success story for gaming and his transition into gaming themed products has been financially beneficial.

While this partnership between Fatal1ty and ASRock isn’t his first (remember Abit or OCZ anyone?), he has been partnered with ASRock for what seems like forever with the first Fatal1ty branded boards (P67 and 990FX) coming to the market back in 2011. Both the Fata1ty branded B450 options are primarily targeted towards gamers on a budget with the intention of using the AMD Ryzen second generation processors, with capability of supporting both the first generation Ryzen processors and Ryzen and Vega core combined APUs.

What's New with the B450 Chipset?

The following B450 analysis was taken from our B450 Launch Motherboard Overview.

The new B450 chipset launch compliments the release of the Ryzen 2000 series processors, with AMD looking at its current mid-range and high-end parts. The B450 chipset is designed to be a cheaper entry point into the ecosystem, even for users picking up the eight-core Ryzen 2700X ($329) and hex-core Ryzen 2600X ($229) units and going to overclock.

Like the already released X470 Promontory chipset, the B450 chipset is the direct successor to previous first generation B350 chipset. Not much hasn’t changed on the surface in regards to USB connectivity, storage options and PCI lanes, however AMD has added a couple of new technologies to bolster the appeal of the new budget-focused chipset.

AMD AM4 Chipsets
  DDR4 OC USB SATA PCIe
2.0
GPU XFR2
PB2
StoreMI TDP RAID
SATA
RAID
NVMe
3.1 3.0 2.0
X470 2933 Y 2 6 6 6 8 x8/x8 Y Y 4.8W 0,1,10
X370 2667 Y 2 6 6 6 8 x8/x8 N** N^ 6.8W 0,1,10
B450 2667+ Y 2 2 6 6* 6 x16 Y Y 4.8W 0,1,10
B350 2667 Y 2 2 6 4 6 x16 N** N^ 6.8W 0,1,10
A320 2667 N 1 2 6 4 4 x16 N** N^ 6.8W 0,1,10 -
Embedded
X300 2667 Y 0 4 0 2 4 x8/x8 N N ? 0,1 -
B300 2667 N 0 4 0 2 4 x16 N N ? 0,1 -
A300 2667 N 0 4 0 2 4 x16 N N ? 0,1 -

*possibly four, double checking with AMD
**Can be possible with BIOS updates, will be motherboard dependant 
^ Can be enabled with certain CPUs if a license is purchased

While the specifications on the surface make the B450 seem like a carbon copy of the B350 chipset, as they share native support for the same USB configuration, the same SATA configuration, support for a single M.2 PCIe 3.0 x4/SATA port, and six PCI lanes dedicated to PCIe 2.0 slots. They also both enable support for the same PCIe 3.0 bifurcation, giving a single PCIe 3.0 x16 slot, focusing these systems on a single GPU.

Analyzing B450 for AMD Ryzen: A Quick Look at 25+ Motherboards

This Review

For our first look at the B450 motherboards starts with a pair of ASRock boards - the B450 Gaming K4 and the B450 Gaming-ITX/ac. These boards are pretty different: a cheaper ATX board and a Wi-Fi enabled mini-ITX board respectively. This is going to be an interesting analysis.

  1. ASRock B450 Gaming K4 Overview
  2. ASRock B450 Gaming-ITX/ac Overview
  3. ASRock and B450
  4. BIOS and Software
  5. Test Bed
  6. System Performance
  7. CPU Performance
  8. Gaming Performance
  9. Overclocking with a Ryzen 7 1700
  10. Conclusions
ASRock B450 Gaming K4 Overview ASRock B450 BIOS and Software
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  • u.of.ipod - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    Why does the USB-C port need to use an additional ASMedia chipset? I thought B450 could support two 3.1 10GBS ports?
  • vkristof - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    Good question! This non-utilization of the B350/B450 on-chip "2 x USB 3.1 Gen2" ports has been a pet peeve of mine. Theoretically, it seems that Gen 2 ports could be added to B450 motherboards for minimal cost...

    I give credit to Gavin Bonshor for mentioning how the motherboard USB 3.1 Gen 2 ports are implemented. His description "the inclusion of a pairing of USB 3.1 10 Gbps (Type-A and Type-C) port; the Type-A comes native to the B450 chipset" indicates that at least one of the B450 Gen 2/10 Gbps ports can be made to work is good to read.
  • linuxgeex - Thursday, August 2, 2018 - link

    Probably so that it can support more USB-C features than the mobo chipset does. ie perhaps thunderbolt and enhanced power delivery.
  • AdrianB1 - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    So Asrock was not able to spend the extra 50 cents to put an Intel LAN on the ATX and mATX boards? In those $100 there was no room for it?
  • PeachNCream - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    An Intel NIC would have been nice, but at least it's a RealTek and not a Killer so ASRock deserves credit where its due.
  • mapesdhs - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    Just curious, what is it about Killer NICs that people seem to not like? My MSI laptop has a Killer NIC and it works fine, at least for the uses I've put it to. So when is it where Killer NICs can or do let one down?
  • hyno111 - Wednesday, August 1, 2018 - link

    Bloated driver.
  • DanNeely - Wednesday, August 1, 2018 - link

    Their drivers have historically been much less stable than Intel or even Realtek's, and I've never seen a 3rd party review from a trusted site able to show any actual benefit for killer's alleged optimization for gaming other than generating fodder for their marketing dept.
  • PhrogChief - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    Only the b350 itx ASRock board has red heatsinks. Is this some copy pasta?
  • PhrogChief - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    And frankly, just using stock photos in a review is just lazy...

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