Conclusion and Verdict
The Killer X299 SLI/ac is one more great motherboard under the ASRock logo. It’s clearly a gaming motherboard but can also be a great base for a workstation. Our tests confirm high performance and also the high-quality of ASRock X299 Killer SLI/ac. Regardless what we were testing, our results were great.
The Killer offers more than the high performance. We can use three high-speed M.2 drives, three graphics cards in SLI mode, high-quality audio, eight memory modules with a total capacity of 128GB, dual-band WiFi and Bluetooth and other devices. Simply more you may need a high-end gaming computer.
In popular online stores, ASRock X299 Killer SLI/ac costs about $265. It’s a good price considering how much motherboards on the X299 chipset cost. Also, not many competitive motherboards have WiFi controller or support for three M.2 drives. All that makes the Killer really interesting option.
Pros:
- High performance
- High quality
- WiFi included
- Inexpensive
- High overclocking potential
- Good memory support
- 3 M.2 PCIe sockets
Cons:
- Single 8-pin CPU power connector may not be enough for overclocked top i9 processors
Final words:
ASRock X299 Killer was designed for gamers and I think that all gamers who decide on this motherboard, will be satisfied. It’s not expensive so saved money can be invested in faster graphics card or SSD. The same as all other ASRock motherboards tested by us, also the Killer is top quality and offers high performance.
ASRock X299 Killer SLI/ac is clearly worth our recommendation and the Recommended Award!.
If you are still looking for something more then stay with us as soon we will show higher model, based on the X299 chipset.
Related articles
- ASRock AB350M Pro4 (AM4) Motherboard Review
- ASRock Fatal1ty X370 Gaming-ITX/ac Motherboard Review
- ASRock X299 Taichi XE Motherboard Review
- Ballistix Sport LT 32GB DDR4-2666 SODIMM on ASRock X299E-ITX/AC
- ASRock Z370 Killer SLI/ac Motherboard Review
- ASRock X399 Taichi (Ryzen Threadripper) Motherboard Review
- ASRock X299 Taichi Motherboard Review
- ASRock X370 Taichi (AM4) Motherboard Review