It would be amazing if the 2 extra x4 general purpose lanes were routed to pcie slots, imagine a board where all or almost all of its pcie slots were cpu routed.
I expect instead they will be inefficiently used on m.2 slots. Companies like ASRock who are the king of i/o options should at least have optional routing to PCIE slots shared with the m.2 slots I hope like on my b450 pro 4. Good to see they will still offer 8 ports as well albeit only on what will probably be really pricey boards.
Also why does the chipset still only have 4 lanes?
I assume pcie gen 3 will be dead on this gen, so cheaper gen 3 boards will be history. Have they figured out a way to make gen 4/5 boards with same number of PCB layers as gen 3 yet?
On the basic point he has nailed it, in short becoming an industry for people who love the newest tech, but the budget side of things has gone to crap.
There should be a budget option on AM5 option for gen 3 PCIE, DDR4, using existing ATX standards and not having VRM's over spec'd. 90% of people would be satisfied with that.
I screen grabbed this.
View attachment 249678
Not sure why you disagree with him.
Flexibility is king and should be the fore front of board design. Or should we all comply and be stuffing our machines with m.2 drives?
I can answer your question of the uses.
1 - Easy install NVME drives, onboard slots are fiddly and hard to cool.
2 - Discrete sound.
3 - Capture card.
4 - I/O card whether its SATA, SAS, NVME or other.
5 - Wifi/Ethernet card.
6 - USB expandability.
7 - Additional GPUs e.g. for virtualization.
Also there is no evidence M.2 slots are cheaper than PCIE slots for manufacturing. Cheaper boards tend to have a higher PCIE slot to M.2 ratio which if anything suggests the opposite. ASUS themselves are always over priced, I brought a PCIE M.2 adaptor for £8 although is now £12.
4 slots?
I have sat wondering what has led to the manufacturers making these decisions, I think part of the problem is they are too heavily influenced by the review industry, reviewers seem to be backing the trend of a new system design that promotes heavy use of M.2, and just a single GPU installed with no other PCIE devices. Thelostswede who I think attended this event and has spoken to some rep's there does he have this point of view which he shared with those reps? It might share some light as to the direction the industry is going in.