To get a "proper" answer you need to ask a proper question. Other than that "Yes" is about as specific as you can get.
There are various types of protections in place against ESD, but they don't always work (or in case of ASUS motherboards - may cause more issues than provided benefits).
Here in Ukraine most old houses and apartment buildings don't have ground at all and local grids running at near or over capacity, so killing hardware with ESD or during thunderstorm is very common.
Have quite a few motherboards in my office that were killed by evil carpets. The latest one was ASUS Z170 mobo that lost audio(codec was still alive, but I suspect the i2c lane on PCH got killed).
On newer laptops it's quite common to kill PCH or SoC if you blast it with static through USB. At my main workplace we've had at least three Dell E6540 laptops, two mini-desktops and one powered hub die that way(all used in a car for data logging). Best case - just need to replace ESD protection IC or USB switch, worst case - it goes straight to chipset. In my workshop I have a small pile of laptop motherboards off cheap Acer and Lenovo laptops that cheaped-out even on rudimentary protection. All you need is one of those popular cheap mini flash drives with exposed pins and a polyester T-Shirt. Or in one case brought by a friend of a friend of a colleague - cheap chinese arc lighter and half-a-brain.