⚡ Power your ambition with the ASRock H670 PG Riptide – where performance meets prestige.
The ASRock H670 PG Riptide is a high-performance ATX motherboard compatible with Intel's 12th Gen CPUs (LGA1700), supporting up to 128GB of DDR4 memory. Designed for professionals and enthusiasts, it offers robust expandability, advanced connectivity, and a sleek aesthetic to enhance any modern workstation.
A**R
Great motherboard.
Works great and turned on as advertised. Came with a keychain and key cap which was pretty cool. Great buy for LGA 1700 socket CPU’s.
D**E
Perfect for my Jellyfin Build!
Needed something small with some modern extras and this works! Using it for my Jellyfin build. Picked AsRock since I have the Steel Legend for my gaming setup and love it. Great layout for the connectors. Has what I need for 2 Sata HDD’s and a system M.2. Has the USB 3+ for external drives. Wish it had 2.5Gbs for internet, but 1gbs is plenty for multiple 4k streams. Just overall great micro atx mb, and fingers crossed it lasts forever!
M**Z
Good for the price
It was amazing I loved the rgb it’s just for me it didn’t fit and it was kinda hard to find all the ports including the jfp1
A**C
Cheap and reliable
Motherboard was not only easy to work with but also provided quality build and functioned basically perfect out of the box. For the price it’s perfect for budget Intel builds
B**A
Works as Expected
No issues what so ever. Even ran fine using nervous Silicon Power ram. Good value.
T**R
Absolute Nightmare
I bought a H670M Pro RS motherboard from these AShats and a Wi-Fi chip. When I opened the motherboard, I realized that the housing apparatus for the chip was not included. Now the website said that the motherboard does not come with a Wi-Fi module, cool I knew that, so I bought a chip, but I didn’t know that I needed the piece that attached to the motherboard. I have the one from my old motherboard, but I didn’t know what to do with it.So, I called customer support to ask how to install the chip. The person I talked to told me that the module did come with WIFI, and I did not need to buy that chip, I just needed to update the drivers. I went and installed the drivers, and I still had no WIFI which did not surprise me, but I am not a computer company’s tech support person, so I took him at his word. I called back and he said if that had not worked, I would need to reinstall windows so that everything could sync up. I asked if he was sure, and he said yes and gave me instructions on how to reinstall windows which I then went and did. When I finally got everything downloaded and up and running, I see that the version of windows I just got needed to be activated, a message that appears in my window and does not go away, even while gaming or watching something, this would cost $180 and, until fixed, would lack basic features that I had with my original version, including security measures that have left me vulnerable.That was Friday, ASRock is closed on the weekend. It’s Monday, life is busy, and I have a big stupid cord running through my living room because my Wi-Fi is still not working. I call ASRock and speak to a person who immediately tells me that the motherboard does not come with WIFI. So now I’m mad right away and I tell this guy everything I’ve told you. He told me that they had no phone records of me calling in and that no one would have told me to do that stuff. So now I’m struggling and failing to stop myself from becoming furious. “So, what I’m feeling is that no one is going to take responsibility for this?” He said he wasn’t calling me a liar, but I had not called in and no one had told me that. Well, here are my phone records you piece of $#&$! Here’s the chip that I had bought and called in to ask how to install! And here's that message that won't even stay in the damn background.This has been my worst experience with a computer company to date. Well computers are about to get real expensive and I would assume that ASRock wants to hold on to customers so if any of them read this, I want my $180, I want the help I needed, which was information on installing the unit, and I want someone at ASrock to admit that not just one, but two of their “support” staff were talking out of their AS.
T**Y
Cheap, durable, power issues in Linux
I bought this because I was building a new home server and it was on sale. I wanted DDR4 ram since it's still cheaper than ddr5 and no one cares about ram speed on a home server. I'm not too picky about brands but looking back through my last 10 years of builds over half my machines are running ASRock motherboards. They've been reliable and affordable.BUT, they have a problem in Linux. Specifically I was seeking the ultimate low idle power machine. A home server spends 99% of it's time idling and it turns out this is quite a quest these days for people. You want something that lets your "pkg" power get into the C8 to C10 states. Out of the box this ASrock only lets you get to C3. Despite turning on package power of C6 in the bios and all the other bios options.Some genius on a forum discovered you can modify the bios though and enable C10 power states. Search for "How to get higher pkg C-States on Asrock motherboards (guide)". It's well documented but you can only do it through windows. An hour later, after a trial windows install, I was able to follow the instructions and sure enough, enabling "Low Power S0 Idle Capability" let me get to C10 pkg state in linux. I had to force some ASPM link states to L1 as well in linux but again, google is your friend.Should I have to do this? No. Apparently this is something that ASRock decided they just didn't want to support. But I didn't really want to return the motherboard. Once adjusted though I had an i5-14500 and 64GB of ram running at 10 watts from the wall idle power with 99% of the time in the C10 pkg state. Just what I was looking for.The 3 M.2 slots are perfect for a mirrored set of drives and one expansion drive for later when eventually ssd's are going to replace spinning disk at capacity. Until then, I've got a couple spinning drives that connect to the sata ports.Had this worked out of the box with a bios setting that let me get to C8-C10 power saving state I would have given it 5 stars and cheered. As it is, it's a 3 star board if your goal is a lower powered linux server. If you're running a gaming machine or something else you won't leave on 24/7 it's not going to matter too much what power state you're in and the board is a good solid board with nice features.
J**R
easy
works great would definitely recommend
Trustpilot
3 days ago
5 days ago