Find the Right High-Speed Port for Your AM5 Build
Navigating the world of USB4 and Thunderbolt can be confusing. This interactive guide helps you choose the perfect ASUS AM5 motherboard based on your specific needs, ensuring you get the performance you pay for.
The Core Dilemma: USB4 vs. Thunderbolt™
At a glance, these two technologies seem identical. They both use the USB-C connector and promise high speeds. However, the key difference lies in guaranteed minimum performance. This section clarifies what each standard truly offers, helping you understand why "Thunderbolt™" is a protected mark of quality.
Guaranteed Minimums: The Real Story
While a high-end USB4 port can match Thunderbolt's capabilities, only Intel's strict certification *guarantees* a top-tier experience across all devices. This chart visualizes the mandatory minimum requirements for each standard. Notice that Thunderbolt 4 sets a much higher bar for video, power, and data, ensuring a consistent, reliable, and high-performance user experience.
What is Your Mission?
The "best" motherboard depends entirely on what you plan to do. Select your primary goal below to see our tailored recommendation. This interactive step will help you filter through the noise and identify the board that is truly built for your workflow.
Professional Content Creation
Your work involves video editing, 3D rendering, or other tasks that demand a powerful discrete GPU connected to a high-resolution USB-C/Thunderbolt display.
Extreme Gaming & Overclocking
You need maximum CPU and memory performance. High-speed ports are for fast external game drives, not your primary monitor.
Future-Proof & Flexible Build
You want a solid, reliable platform now, with a cost-effective path to add fully certified Thunderbolt capabilities later.
Side-by-Side Motherboard Comparison
Use this tool to compare the key features of the motherboards discussed in this guide. Select the models you're interested in to see how they stack up. This interactive table makes it easy to spot the critical differences, like the presence of a DisplayPort input or an internal expansion header.
| Feature |
|---|