





🚀 Elevate Your Gaming Experience!
The ASRock X570 Phantom Gaming-ITX/TB3 is a high-performance Mini ITX motherboard designed for AMD Ryzen processors, featuring cutting-edge Thunderbolt 3 connectivity, Wi-Fi 6 support, and advanced audio capabilities, all packed into a compact form factor.


| ASIN | B07VXYYG7F |
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,220 in Computer Motherboards |
| Brand | ASRock |
| Built-In Media | - Quick Installation Guide, Support CD - 2 x SATA Data Cables - 1 x ASRock WiFi 2. |
| CPU Model | Ryzen 5 |
| CPU Socket | Socket AM4 |
| Chipset Type | AMD 570X |
| Compatible Devices | Personal Computer |
| Compatible Processors | AMD Ryzen 3000 Series , AMD Ryzen 4000 G-Series, AMD Ryzen 5000 Series |
| Customer Reviews | 3.9 out of 5 stars 291 Reviews |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 04717677339147 |
| Graphics Card Interface | PCI Express |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 7.4"L x 3.7"W x 9"H |
| Item Type Name | ASRock X570 Phantom Gaming-ITX/TB3 Mini ITX Thunderbolt 3 AMD Motherboard Model X570 Phantom GAM ITX |
| Item Weight | 948 Grams |
| Main Power Connector Type | 24-Pin |
| Manufacturer | Asrock |
| Memory Clock Speed | 2666 MHz |
| Memory Slots Available | 2 |
| Memory Storage Capacity | 64 GB |
| Mfr Part Number | X570 Phantom Gaming-ITX/TB3 |
| Model Name | X570 PHANTOM GAMING-ITX/TB3 |
| Model Number | X570 Phantom Gaming-ITX/TB3 |
| Number of Ports | 8 |
| Platform | Windows |
| Processor Socket | Socket AM4 |
| RAM Memory Technology | DDR4 |
| Ram Memory Maximum Size | 64 GB |
| S/PDIF Connector Type | Optical |
| System Bus Standard Supported | SATA 3 |
| Total Number of HDMI Ports | 1 |
| Total PCIe Ports | 1 |
| Total SATA Ports | 1 |
| Total Usb Ports | 7 |
| USB 2.0 | 2 |
| Warranty Description | 1 year |
M**A
Huge improvement for my build!
For the longest time, I've been using an Asus P8H61-I R2.0, paired with an Intel i5-3470 and 16Gb of Kingston DDR3-10600. I started with some HDDs and a very crappy Geforce GTS450. Eventually, I upgraded to SSDs and an a GTX-1060. While it still performed everything I asked of it quite nicely, the new generation of hardware was too much of a temptation and decided to upgrade. The main reason I chose this board was the built-in Thunderbolt connectivity and the form factor. The RGB is a nice bonus too... After setting everything up, I haven't experienced any issues. Installing my Ryzen 7 3700x was a breeze. Space to "maneuver" is scarce, but that's a given with any mITX board. I went with a Noctua NH-L9i chromax.Black, which is one of the recommended coolers for this board and it fits in quite nicely. Make sure to install the CPU and cooler first! I was able to load the correct XMP profiles for the pair of HyperX Predator DDR4 3200MHz, plug my old SATA SSDs (which now work considerably faster, given that they are now plugged to SATA 3 ports rather than SATA 2 ports) and my GTX-1060. Even Windows 10 loaded without too much hassle, just a few bangs in device manager due lack of drivers and it complaining about "activation". Installed updated drivers, the latest BIOS, fixed Windows' activation nag and have been a happy camper since. Of course, nothing is perfect, I do have a complaint about the included manual. The one I got didn't have a board layout schematic, so it was difficult to ID the headers. To top it off, the case header is next to a USB 2.0 header which is almost identical. The board is all black and there's no text on itself to ID the headers. I downloaded one of the manuals from Asrock's website which did have the board layout schematic. Armed with that, I was reminded how much I hate plugging individual pins to a header. That's not a fault of the board, but a fault of the case. I wish Silverstone would have fitted the RVZ-02 with one of those "unified" case plugs... I read a few reviews of users complaining about the angled SATA ports, which I thought could give me a bit of trouble, but it really hasn't. I think that would depend on the case and cables, I guess. I still need to get a Thunderbolt dock, an NVMe drive, a better monitor, a different case and some water cooling to finish how I want to set everything up, but as it is right now, it's working fantastically. Everything is super snappy and I haven't even played with the overclocking yet. This board was certified by Intel for it's Thunderbolt, I doubt it'll be an issue. I've used Asrock boards in the past and have been very happy with their reliability and their longevity. I expect this to continue with this one.
W**E
Great Thunderbolt motherboard for BF and Heritage UA Apollo gear . Fits 2U Atx rack Case
Flawless with Universal Audio Apollo TB3 devices. Solid functionality. used with Apollo Quad and Apollo 8 Black face This is my second one. User the Intel 1151 heatsink and fan which fits a 2u rack case easily. Cut off the harness hook on the stock intel 1151 heatsink to get the memory in the slot closest to the heatsink. Get an M.2 extender cable so the M.2 drive isn't stuck under the board This allows an M.2 heatsink addition. Past that it should be all good. Be sure to check the CPU compatibility. I have used a Ryzen 3700X on this one. the former had a 2700X which is a bit hard to get at a good price these days. Carefully identify the pin orientation when dropping the CPU in the slot. Be sure to remove the plastic from the Chipset heatsinks too or it will run hot. Never overclocking in a DAW if you ask me. Case fans should also have a nice front to rear flow. Runs pretty cool if you follow these guidelines
M**L
Very buggy, loud fan
This is my first ASRock board, and it will be my last. I'd always heard their boards were cheaper and not as well supported, but they work well enough. This is also the only board that is mini-ITX, supports AMD, and has a Thunderbolt 3 port. Still, this board is awful. The placement of many ports is inconvenient, and, more importantly, the BIOS is very very buggy even after updates. I'm talking sometimes it doesn't start correctly, sometimes it doesn't detect my keyboard, sometimes it takes minutes to start. Also, the BIOS doesn't support thunderbolt 3, which is infuriating since the whole point of this is to have thunderbolt 3 as the main port used for everything. An awful product. Do not buy.
R**.
Good board, bad luck for me though.
The board is solidly constructed and I was able to install it with no issues. However, perhaps my board was defective, but I could not get more than one USB port to register connected devices that weren't data storage (thumb drives or external HDs), and though it detected when something was connected to the back or front audio ports, I got no sound. Everything else about the board worked great, Bluetooth, wifi, fans etc worked perfectly with none of the reported noise from the included cooling fan. I was able to run programs buttery smooth, if it hadn't been for the sound issue I might even have kept the board and connected it to a USB 3 hub. The combination of both problems was a bit much though. I wrote the manufacturer and was advised to return to seller, but I am outside the return window with Amazon as I was away from home before being able to install it and spent so long trying to get it to work I missed the deadline by 2 days. Hopefully I can get the manufacturer to take it in directly. Lesson learned, don't order PC parts if you wont be home to install them right away.
D**0
Updated Review - A decent AM4 Mobo - for the most part, almost got 5 Stars, but...
So as the title has suggested this is now an updated review - and yes, I bought this on here on Amazon. Honestly, I expected better ASROCK! My Setup will be the last part below if you want to know what I am currently - running. The Pros - This motherboard has a lot of them: Very Good Features in a Mini ITX mobo - -Has Thunderbolt (which is Awesome) and a decent amount of USB 3.2 ports -Solid AM4/ support all the way to 5950X (Yes, it does)! So, it makes for a great upgrade path down the road! -PCIE Gen 4 for the M.2 slot and video card slot - which is great and a decent bios that's okay to overclock with. -The PCIE video card slot is reinforced with metal/stainless steel bracket which is excellent for bigger and heavier cards - trust me a big plus! Now the cons - these are issues that I found bothersome about this MOBO: Previously - I was kinda hard in my earlier review, but honest, as I am still not sure if I will buy another ASROCK MOBO again, but who knows... My biggest #1 gripe was... The chipset MOBO fan has an awful ticking noise, and there was no way to get rid of it. I opened up the fan housing to see if it was hitting anything and it is the fan itself (did not find anything). However, after some carefully placed silicon spray and some slight, but gentle sanding of the fan blades (Yes I know, never had to do this before), it's pretty much is gone. I was pretty upset about this because of the cost of the MOBO - I didn't want to redo my setup and send back this MOBO back - Honestly, bad quality control ASROCK! Number #2 gripe - Water Cooling Holes - Give the holes plenty of SPACE for bracket screws and the like hardware. Geez ASROCK come on, this should be a no brainier in 2020. Don't have caps and resistors around these holes, barely managed to get my Evermax water cooler on, but it went on. My #3 gripe was the Sound - it seemed clean, but the Mic did not work properly - geez AROCK. My #4 gripe was the Memory location - No Room at all. I did not have this issue on my older MSI Mini ITX Intel setup - I had to take my heatsinks off - which was kinda a bummer - again ASROCK, could have been a lot better. My #5 gripe - that the board cooling, as others have mentioned gives little room for water cooling or larger air coolers - So the surrounding heatsink layout for the and transistor's around the CPU was poorly designed. ASROCK you cannot account for every type of cooling situation, but you could have put some more thought into it as well. Again, we are in 2020! That is my review brief, but hopefully accurate. Would I buy this again based on the features it has? Honestly, a tough question, as I would see what else is out there based on the quality control issues I have experienced. Again it does have a number of great features, but mini-ITX builders like myself need things to work. My setup: -AMD 3700X (from time to time I OC it, but not anymore) - Great upgrade path to 5950X down the road. -Western Digital WD BLACK SN750 NVMe M.2 2280 1TB PCI-Express 3.0 x4 64-layer 3D NAND Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) WDS100T3X0C + Several SSD's of varying sizes. I think I have total of 2.25TB total storage on this puppy. -G.SKILL Flare X (for AMD) 16GB (2 x 8GB) 288-Pin DDR4 SDRAM DDR4 3200 (PC4 25600) Intel XMP 2.0 Desktop --Memory Model F4-3200C16D-16GFX (I had to take off the heatsinks for them to fit). -Gigabyte RTX2070 - White edition (got it for $250 a few months ago) - Incredible video card. -Enermax Liqtech 120X Aluminum All-in-One Liquid Cooler 43MM Thick Radiator w/ Duo 120mm Static Pressure. - Cooler Master Elite 130 - Mini-ITX Computer Case with Mesh Front Panel and Water Cooling Support (this is modded out by me).
B**N
TB3 on an AMD motherboard?!
What a wonky motherboard! I needed a Gaming AMD motherboard and wanted to add a 10gbe network interface to it. Since 10gbe gets so hot, it's tough to find a motherboard with these requirements... but you can totally add a 10gbe to Thunderbolt 3 adapter using this thing! Besides the cooler, which I should have prepared for, I had no issues setting up the motherboard. Make sure you review which coolers are compatible with this on their website! I went with a Corsair h60i cooler and it works great.
S**F
M.2 with Samsung nVMe doesn't work
M.2 with Samsung nVMe doesn't work
L**K
TB3 on AMD
This is such a weird board. Bought it because it's one of the few AMD boards available with Thunderbolt 3. Does exactly what I expected it to.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
2 weeks ago