ASUS Announces Z270 Series Motherboards

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ASUS today announced its current 2017 lineup of Z270 motherboards designed to maximize the performance of 7 th Generation Intel ® Core™ processors. The new range includes the highly-anticipated next-generation Republic of Gamers (ROG) Maximus IX gaming motherboards for the gaming and performance oriented enthusiast — with Maximus IX Apex having already secured its place as the best performing Z270 motherboard by claiming eight world records and 13 global first places in some of the world’s toughest benchmarks.

Also included in the lineup are the latest ROG Strix gaming motherboards that redefine gaming centric motherboard design, the all-new ASUS Prime series for everyday customization and tuning, and the latest ASUS TUF boards with unparalleled reliability, stability and newly-added overclocking abilities. The ASUS workstation motherboard series has also been updated for the Z270 revolution — and all boards are loaded with exclusive technologies to enable users to extract every ounce of performance from Intel’s latest CPUs.

Commenting on the Z270 motherboard series, Joe Hsieh, ASUS Corporate Vice President and General Manager of Motherboard Business Unit & New Product Planning Division said, "Our previous generations have been validated, praised and awarded by the media and our customers, confirming ASUS is the number-one motherboard brand for all your needs. For our Z270 generation, we’ve taken innovation and customization to the next level, with personalization features such as Aura Sync RGB lighting, exclusive EFI controls and support for 3D-printed components. We’ve also co-operated with Shapeways to launch a dedicated ASUS shop where users are able to purchase, download and customize and 3D-printable accessories worldwide — so they’ll have options to customize their systems in ways not previously available. It’s time to unlock the power of 7th Generation Intel Core processors — and an ASUS Z270-series motherboard is the perfect way to do just that!"
 
Maybe it's just me but it feels like there's just way too many boards for this one chipset. I don't know, seems to me like they could have just done four or five boards.
 
I think Asus actually announced too many motherboard models at once. Looking at the different models. Having a hard time figuring out which caters to what with so much overlap between the models.
 
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