MSI MEG X570S Ace Max Gaming Motherboard Review
MSI's MEG X570S Ace Max motherboard is one of the better AMD X570 "refresh" boards available. Join us as we check it out.
The Bottom Line
Introduction, Specifications, and Pricing
With Zen 4 looming on the horizon, we begin our wrap-up of AMD 500 series chipset motherboards. Starting this wind-down, MSI sent over its top X570S SKU, the MEG X570 ACE Max, which adds incentives to the platform for any consumers still looking t the viability of Zen 3 CPUs for their gaming or gaming productivity machines.
A few of the key ingredients in this refreshed motherboard come in the form of its thermal capabilities. This includes an enlarged chipset heat sink, full thermal armor for the m.2 slots, and improved heat pipe design for the VRMs. While discussing increased cooling for the VRM, we should also note the new 16+2 power design, an all-digital direct design that uses 90A smart power stages.
On the hardware front, the MEG ACE Max is an AM4 socket, X570 chipset design. This offers a wide range of compatibility with 3000,4000 and 5000 series CPUs. Memory is supported from 2133MHz through 5400 MHz, DDR4, with four slots available.
Storage includes 8x SATA connections for legacy drives and four m.2 slots, all Gen4 capable. Networking consists of the AX210 WiFi6 chipset from Intel and Realtek 2.5Gbe, while audio is handled by the newer ALC4080 paired with an ESS Sabre 9018DAC.
Pricing
The MEG MSI X570 ACE Max carries an MSRP of $449.99 with a three-year warranty.
Packaging, Accessories, and Overview
Packaging and Accessories
Packaging for the Ace Max includes an image of the board to the left socket and chipset support down below.
The rear of the packaging includes features to the right and specs right below, including a rear I/O layout.
Accessories include Wi-Fi antenna, SATA cables, and the M.2 XPander.
X570S Ace Max Overview
The Ace Max keeps the gold and black colorway we are used to with a large MSI gaming logo on the Rear I/O shield. Much of the board is covered in black armor, and PCIe slots are reinforced and shielded.
The back of the board is mostly blank. Added backplates for the VRM heat sink can be seen above.
Rear I/O includes a full host of USB ports, four 2.0 at the top followed by another four Gen1. Further down, we have three Gen 2 ports in red and USB-C using Gen2x2.
Running around the board, we have front panel audio connections starting off on the bottom. This is followed by a host of RGB and Fan connections, USB 2.0 headers rounding it out.
Just before we move around the corner, we find a USB 3.2 header along with power and reset buttons.
Getting around the corner, we find eight SATA connections and another Gen1 USB 3.2 header.
Moving up the side of the board, we run into a Gen2 internal header and the 24-pin power connection, ending at the debug LED.
The top row gives us four fan connections.
Dual 8-pin power connections are available for the CPU.
UEFI, Software and Test System
UEFI
BIOS for the MEG Ace Max is Click BIOS 5. Starting with the easy mode, you will get all information about the CPU and RAM along the top, including frequency and temperature. The boot sequence shows installed drives and fan controls to the right.
Advanced mode is where you will find tweaking tools for CPU and memory, including voltages. AORUS has additional options in the IO Ports menu; these include the ability to disable IGP and configure LAN controls, Thunderbolt, and storage.
Motherboard Testing Supporters
Sabrent supports our storage testing with the Rocket 4 Plus.
TweakTown AMD Motherboard Test System
- CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 5800X
- GPU: NVIDIA RTX A5000
- RAM: Thermaltake Toughram DDR4 4000 (buy from Amazon)
- OS Storage: Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus 1TB (buy from Amazon)
- Power Supply: ASUS Thor 1200W (buy from Amazon)
- OS: Microsoft Windows 11 (buy from Amazon)
Cinebench R23, Realbench and AIDA64
Cinebench and AIDA64
Cinebench R23
Cinebench is a long-standing render benchmark that has been heavily relied upon by both Intel and AMD to showcase their newest platforms during unveils. The benchmark has two tests, a single-core workload that will utilize one thread or 1T. There is also a multi-threaded test that uses all threads or nT of a tested CPU.
Looking at R23, the Ace Max is showing solid results with our 5800X. 1585 for single thread and 15642 nT.
Realbench
In Realbench, we see a time of 33 seconds for the heavy multitasking workload.
AIDA64
Memory bandwidth comes in as expected, 46K read, 25k write, and 46k copy.
PCMark10, Puget Benchmarks, and Gaming
PCMark10, 3DMark and CrossMark Benchmarks
PCMark 10
PCMark is a benchmark from UL and tests various workload types to represent typical workloads for a PC. Everything from video conferencing, image import, and editing, along with 3D rendering, are tested.
We picked up 13691 for digital content, the highest for the Ace Max. Both essentials and productivity land and 11K and 10K, respectively.
PugetBench
Photoshop workloads pull in 1194 for the Ace, on par with the average across all boards.
Moving to the Davinci Resolve workloads, we see a score of 1147, middle of the road for X570.
Gaming
Our Flight Simulator run with the Ace Max grabbed 50 FPS at 1080p ultra settings.
System I/O Benchmarks and Final Thoughts
Storage with CrystalDiskMark
Storage performance was fantastic, NVMe topping 7022 MB/s with our Sabrent Rocket Plus.
Random read and write were quite good as well, 60 MB/s read, and 200 MB/s write.
Audio measured at 91.1dBa.
Final Thoughts
The MSI X570S Ace Max is one of the better "refresh" boards we have tested. It's in many cases a sizable upgrade from the X570 Ace; the Max has better overall options for connectivity, including add-ons like Gen2x2 and WiFi6 and a better audio chipset. Aesthetically, this board engaged a subtle armor design capable of being without RGB entirely, something not always easy to find in the current market.
In testing, the Ace Max ran alongside previous boards in most scenarios, including Cinebench R23 and Realbench. AIDA memory showed bandwidth pushing 46K read and copy, while write was in the middle at 25k. PCMark 10 showed this board running up with the top boards tested, and our Flight Simulator gaming runs averaged out to near 51 FPS at 1080p Ultra settings. Storage performance was fantastic, hitting 7022 MB/s with our Rocket Plus and additional testing of external ports proved no issue for the Ace Max.
While the market for Zen 3 has certainly changed over the last few months, the Ace Max remains a solid option for any consumer wanting to pick up a great full-featured motherboard based on the AMD X570 chipset.
The Ace Max has a stacked rear I/O with twelve USB ports split between USB 3.2 and USB 2.0 alongside 2.5Gbe, Wi-Fi 6, and a legit audio stack complete with ESS DAC.
Performance | 90% |
Quality | 95% |
Features | 95% |
Value | 85% |
Overall | 91% |
The Bottom Line
The Ace Max is a full featured flagship motherboard that consumers should puts at the top of their list when building on AMD X570.
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