Conclusion

If someone is looking for a high-end motherboard like the ROG Maximus X Apex, this at least hints at the user being an enthusiast and wanting the most out of their system - perhaps even with a bit of style. Hardcore gamers and overclockers (especially sub-ambient overclocking) require a motherboard which can support these activities. While nearly all Z370 boards across all vendors are able to handle gaming and some overclocking, all except a few were designed with overclocking as one of their primary functions. The Apex covers that aspect well. From the use of two DRAM slots instead of four, large heatsinks to cool power delivery, condensation sensors, and the all the buttons and switches on the top-right corner of the board specifically designed to make overclocking and troubleshooting (which goes hand in hand) easier. Overall the board is well rounded offering most users enough storage, superior integrated water cooling and monitoring capabilities, gaming and plenty of features to help with overclocking the CPU, especially when using extreme cooling methods. 

The overall look of the board is quite unique with its cutouts on each of the four sides making it look like an 
"X" shaped motherboard of sorts. RGB implementation was plentiful with around 19 RGB LEDs on the back of the motherboard in various locations along the edge. In addition, there are three locations on the front of the board with RGB LEDs - under the corner of the VRM heatsink, the ROG name placard, and the chipset heatsink. All of which can be controlled by the AURA Lighting software. 


Bling bling

The performance testing on the Apex had the board leading in most tests against the very tightly packed group of results we have so far. Power testing did show slightly higher use in idle states by a few watts but returned to normal during load situations. The Apex also likes to boot a few seconds faster any other board we tested so far that isn't ASUS (the Z370-I Gaming was the quickest) than most other boards which is nice to see if shutting down your PC is the norm. Overclocking yielded good results taking our i7-8700K to a stable 5.1 GHz. 5.2 GHz proved to be much more difficult to stabilize, and the CPU used for my testing appears to have simply hit a voltage wall and temps were higher than we like to see. Perhaps it needs delidding. The BIOS had all the options needed and more than ready to push the limits of whatever CPU in the socket with whatever cooling is on hand. The pre-prepared memory and overclocking profiles are a nice added touch. 

Overall, the ASUS ROG Maximus X Apex is a very capable board. Its overclocking features currently sit in a class of its own, though I can imagine that if an ASRock OC Formula would exist then it would provide stiff competition. Outside of that, the board has all the modern fixings that should come along with this mainstream platform. About the only thing I would like to have seen was a front panel USB 3.1 header on the board, or if ASUS was able to use four memory slots, it could widen its appeal. Its monitoring and cooling ecosystem are about the best I have seen on a motherboard. We will find few boards which have 10 fan/pump headers and even less that have water in/out sensors and flow sensors integrated. This typically requires an additional purchase of a fan controller and adds cost to the build. Additionally, the 5GbE is also not something one will typically find on Z370 motherboards. The board hasa  great cooling ecosystem, high-end features, and styling offer a well-rounded package to build an enthusiast level Z370 based machine, although some of the more 'general features' such as 4 DIMMs or more SATA ports are exchanged for that overclocking functionality.  

The Apex is the equivalent of a Porsche GT3 RS with a roll cage: the ideal car for particular groups of people. If overclocking is your thing, one of the boards best equipped to push the limits of a Coffee Lake CPU with sub-ambient cooling methods, will be the ASUS ROG Maximus X Apex

AnandTech Intel Z370 Motherboard and CPU Coverage

Overclocking with the i7-8700K
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  • Flunk - Friday, May 11, 2018 - link

    I suspect we're only a short distance from every single motherboard being labelled "gaming", at which point it doesn't mean anything anymore. Truthfully, I don't think it means anything now.
  • tech6 - Friday, May 11, 2018 - link

    ...and most will have cheap voltage regulators and capacitors but pretty LEDs and a neat colored PCB.
  • wumpus - Friday, May 11, 2018 - link

    That's pretty much what I expect now (with the possible exception of buying a "non gaming" board for roughly the same price without the LEDs and fancy colors, presumably mostly sold by OEMs to business.

    Who else buys motherboards?
  • dgingeri - Friday, May 11, 2018 - link

    ...and yet another Asus board with far too few USB ports. Why are they going so cheap with the USB ports these days?
  • DanNeely - Friday, May 11, 2018 - link

    It's maxed out on back panel IO. What do you want them to drop to add another pair of ports?

    Also, although there's no block diagram provided, I suspect the board is maxed out on HSIO ports from the chipset, and could only offer 2.0 ports.
  • Fallen Kell - Friday, May 11, 2018 - link

    I think his point is that there is prime real estate being taken up by two PS/2 ports which are about 10 years past their usefulness, especially in the day and age that we have PS/2 to USB connectors which cost next to nothing and/or are included now with any device that happens to still use the 20 year old port. Four additional USB ports could have been placed in the space used by those two PS/2.
  • hosps - Friday, May 11, 2018 - link

    You kids and your USB keyboards and mice. PS/2 is where it's at if you need an N-Key rollover capability that USB doesn't support.
  • WannaBeOCer - Friday, May 11, 2018 - link

    You old people and your lack of keeping up with new technology. USB does support N-Key rollover. Bought my Cherry MX Board 6.0 in 2015 with full N-Key rollover.
  • Holliday75 - Saturday, May 12, 2018 - link

    I'm still pissed serial ports are no longer included.
  • ctbaars - Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - link

    Where do I plug in my parallel port dongle? I'll pass ...

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