Saturday, September 24th 2022
BIOSTAR Releases the X670E Valkyrie Motherboard
BIOSTAR, a leading brand of motherboards, graphics cards, and storage devices, today announces the brand new X670E VALKYRIE ATX motherboard. Designed based on the AMD X670 chipset, the X670E VALKYRIE supports all new AMD AM5 Ryzen 7000 Processors, capable of extracting unprecedented performance for gaming, content creation, or any compute-heavy task thrown at it.
The X670E VALKYRIE motherboard carries BIOSTAR's top-shelf VALKYRIE range styling with a heavy emphasis on performance and cooling. DDR5 RAM support, PCIe 5.0, and PCIe 5.0 M.2 are essential features of any high-end motherboard in 2022. The new X670E VALKYRIE has it all with exceptional performance and synergy enabled by BIOSTAR's signature 22-phase power design and Digital PWM technology.BIOSTAR has also given extra attention to its choice of inductors and capacitors, sticking to the highly efficient and reliable Super Durable Choke & Solid Capacitors that perform exceptionally well with their proprietary 105 A Dr. MOS technology. Furthermore, great features like Tough Power Connectors and Iron Slot Protection, M.2 cooling protection, and Moisture-proof PCB add a layer of extra durability to the system for long-lasting performance.
The X670E VALKYRIE motherboard carries ample connectivity and expansion capability with prominent features like USB 3.2 Gen2x2 Type-C, HDMI 2.1 & Display 1.4 in the rear I/O panel making it highly versatile for any user preferences. Additionally, the 2 new PCI-E 5.0 x16 Slots provide the best support for any latest power-hungry graphics card engineered to extract maximum performance for gaming and intense graphic workloads. The X670E VALKYRIE motherboard is also supported by BIOSTAR's SMART BIOS Update function, allowing users to keep their BIOS updated without hassle.
To conclude, The X670E VALKYRIE motherboard is the best AM5-based motherboard in the market for gamers, content creators, or even tech enthusiasts looking to build their next beastly computer that will be the envy of their rivals.
For more information, visit the product page.
The X670E VALKYRIE motherboard carries BIOSTAR's top-shelf VALKYRIE range styling with a heavy emphasis on performance and cooling. DDR5 RAM support, PCIe 5.0, and PCIe 5.0 M.2 are essential features of any high-end motherboard in 2022. The new X670E VALKYRIE has it all with exceptional performance and synergy enabled by BIOSTAR's signature 22-phase power design and Digital PWM technology.BIOSTAR has also given extra attention to its choice of inductors and capacitors, sticking to the highly efficient and reliable Super Durable Choke & Solid Capacitors that perform exceptionally well with their proprietary 105 A Dr. MOS technology. Furthermore, great features like Tough Power Connectors and Iron Slot Protection, M.2 cooling protection, and Moisture-proof PCB add a layer of extra durability to the system for long-lasting performance.
The X670E VALKYRIE motherboard carries ample connectivity and expansion capability with prominent features like USB 3.2 Gen2x2 Type-C, HDMI 2.1 & Display 1.4 in the rear I/O panel making it highly versatile for any user preferences. Additionally, the 2 new PCI-E 5.0 x16 Slots provide the best support for any latest power-hungry graphics card engineered to extract maximum performance for gaming and intense graphic workloads. The X670E VALKYRIE motherboard is also supported by BIOSTAR's SMART BIOS Update function, allowing users to keep their BIOS updated without hassle.
To conclude, The X670E VALKYRIE motherboard is the best AM5-based motherboard in the market for gamers, content creators, or even tech enthusiasts looking to build their next beastly computer that will be the envy of their rivals.
For more information, visit the product page.
53 Comments on BIOSTAR Releases the X670E Valkyrie Motherboard
And TBH I never will use one again.
Let me sum it up for you - The thing that killed it was a bad/defective stick of RAM.
When the stick shat it's drawers the BioStar choked on the spot and died so I then swapped everything over to another board (Asus).
My Asus detected it, laughed at it, said "Hey - You got a bad one here" and after swapping the bad stick out it kept going without a problem.
I have nothing against these people to have something to do, but the area of consumer electronics is not for them.
If our man ir_cow says yea, I may. If nay, I'll stay away.
Aren't I the clever one this cold ass morning? Haha Couldn't agree more. For me, that thins out an already very sparse list. Thankfully, the cold months are upon us...no more yardwork or calls to use my truck. A researchin I can go.
I don't think they really did anything high end but my memory sure isn't what it used to be.
I haven't used one since the intel 965/975 chipset days, it was cheap as chips and oced like a monster. I killed it eventually but I killed a lot of shit back then so no hard feelings at all.
I may give them a try again if they review well. With mb prices having gone full on retarded I'm open to pretty much anything.
I have huge regrets with Asus motherboards as their Armory Crate software is constantly giving me issues with their Fan Xpert. It takes months for the Asus tech team to address their issues with new updates. I can't believe how a software being updated constantly still has bugs, drives me crazy!
I'm one of those that had a bad experience with what I had twice in 6 months and what got me was HOW the last one died in the end.
Something any other board would have just indicated a bad stick or simply shown one not working killed the one I had outright. From that I'm not convinced their designs are anywhere near solid and doesn't help I've seen cheaper components used too such as Nikos MOSFETS for example - The very ones by name MSI was using back in the days of their top-tier AM3 boards that were frying and dying like lemmings at a dive meet.
I had one of those too (790FX-GD70) and yes, it did the same as the rest seemed to be doing at that time BUT at least MSI has picked up their game and is doing better these days.
The X570 MEG ACE I have now is a much better board and it's not even their top-tier offering for X570.
That was mentioned to make a point and nothing more.
The BioStar I had was their top tier AM3+ (TA 990-FXE) board and my "Grudge" is from what I described.
Two failures in a very short amount of time, both resulting in dead boards AND the last being strictly from a dead stick of RAM the other board laughed at doesn't speak well of their quality or engineering.
I'm not doubting some of their stuff was good and that some had a good experience with them - Any and all makes have their lemons and failures along the way right along with some good stuff too.
If you like BioStar, it's your choice to go with them but it's not my choice or ever will be again.
There is nothing else to say about it on my part - That's it.
What's wrong with saying as much concerning my own experience? Either you did or didn't have a bad experience as I did, so I said it and why too.
I'm sure everyone else here has their own thoughts about it - In fact I know they do and all this is proof of it - And it's OK.
It's the same as those saying it's good for reasons of their own, which I don't have a problem with.
Yes - TBF I could be wrong but that's my opinion of it and why I think that, backed by real experience of what happened and the reason why, plus what happened afterwards too which is how I found out HOW it died.
*The "HOW" part being important to the point it was THE deciding factor for me.*
One would think Any board should be able to tolerate a simply bad stick of RAM without snuffing it, esp when other boards did with the same stick and had no problem over it.
I already know if you or anyone else believes something is bad, you'll say so and you have every right to and that's fair in itself - Again, I don't have an issue with it.
If you want one, get it and be happy - I'm not and that's fair enough all around.
I do not understand why we should apparently hold Biostar in lower regard than the other manufacturers when those have had tons of issues and engaged in shameful practices. I mean, what do people really expect when buying a $40-50 board? Modern, more expensive Biostar boards are not comparable to those.
This isn't their usual market