ASUS также позаботилась о владельцах своих материнских плат, которые решили перейти на Windows 11. Для этого компания выложила развернутый пост в разделе FAQ на своем официальном сайте.
Во-первых, в нем перечисляются все текущие требования к аппаратному обеспечению для перехода на Windows 11 и полезные ссылки. Например, есть ссылки на актуальный список совместимых процессоров AMD и Intel.
Во-вторых, ASUS выложила список совместимых с Windows 11 фирменных материнских плат. Он включает в себя модели следующих серий:
В-третьих, есть подробная инструкция по проверке статуса TPM на вашем компьютере. Для начала можно проверить его с помощью меню «Выполнить» (комбинация клавиш Win+R). В нем необходимо ввести «TPM.MSC» и нажать Enter.
Если поддержка TPM уже активна, то вы увидите окно TPM Management on Local Computer с указанием версии. Если технология неактивна в вашей системе, то в ответ на запрос получите сообщение о невозможности найти TPM.
Во втором случае нужно просто перейти в BIOS и включить поддержку этой технологии. Для материнских плат Intel необходимо в BIOS найти раздел Advanced – > PCH-FW Configuration, и в нем активировать пункт «PTT».
Для материнских плат AMD следует перейти на страницу Advanced – > AMD fTPM configuration, а затем выбрать значение «Firmware TPM» для параметра «TPM Device Selection». После этого не забудьте сохранить изменения. Проверить активацию TPM можно с помощью меню «Выполнить» или в BIOS на странице Advanced –> Trusted Computing.
With Microsoft in the news about their extensive redesign of Windows in their new Windows 11 operating system, manufacturers are hard at work to ensure their users are not going to have issues with any of the hardware on their computer.
On July 2nd, ASUS recently updated their FAQs, covering compatibility of their motherboards in relation to Windows 11.
To help to distinguish which ASUS motherboards are compatibile, ASUS does release this disclaimer about Windows 11:
Windows 11 has not been officially released and there might be stability issues with the Insider Preview build as it has not passed formal hardware validation and qualification. The installation or upgrade to the Windows 11 Insider Preview or any third-party software is done at your own discretion and risk. You will be solely responsible for any damage to your system or loss of data that results from that activity. ASUS will not be liable for any losses and damages in connection with the use of Windows 11.
Wccftech would like to remind our readers to please use caution when upgrading to any new OS, and to ensure backups of computer data and other important settings are made before updating.
First, let’s look at the minimum hardware requirements needed to run Windows 11:
Hardware Requirements for Windows 11
Processor | 1 GHz or faster with two or more cores on a compatible 64-bit processor or System on a Chip (SoC) |
Memory | 4 GB RAM |
Storage | 64 GB or larger storage device |
System firmware | UEFI, Secure Boot capable |
TPM |
Trusted Platform Module (TPM) version 2.0
(*Both discrete TPM and firmware TPM supported) |
Graphics card | DirectX 12 compatible graphics / WDDM 2.x |
Display | >9” with HD Resolution (720p) |
Internet connection | Microsoft account and internet connectivity required for setup for Windows 11 Home |
When looking at the above table, the TPM, or Trusted Platform Module 2.0, is required to ensure full compatibility with BitLocker and SecureBoot with Windows 11. It is (currently) a minimum requirement by Microsoft. All ASUS motherboards utilize TPM version 2.0. ASUS stresses the importance of checking to make sure your system settings, especially the Trusted Platform Module. The TPM is a secure cryptoprocessor that is an international standard on all computers, but it is disabled by default on a majority of motherboards and can cause major issues when installing Windows 11. The TPM acts as a dedicated microprocessor for carrying out various cryptographic operations, embedded in a packaging with multiple levels of physical security, giving it a degree of resistance to any flaws in it becoming manipulated.
ASUS has provided instructions in their FAQs about how to check and also activate TPM 2.0 on any Windows compatible PC here.
Here is the current list of TPM 2.0 supported ASUS motherboards:
Supported ASUS motherboards with TPM 2.0
Intel platform | AMD platform |
C621 Series | WRX80 Series |
C422 Series | TRX40 Series |
X299 Series | X570 Series |
Z590 Series | B550 Series |
Q570 Series | A520 Series |
H570 Series | X470 Series |
B560 Series | B450 Series |
H510 Series | X370 Series |
Z490 Series | B350 Series |
Q470 Series | A320 Series |
H470 Series | |
B460 Series | |
H410 Series | |
W480 Series | |
Z390 Series | |
Z370 Series | |
H370 Series | |
B365 Series | |
B360 Series | |
H310 Series | |
Q370 Series | |
C246 Series |
The following two tables list both AMD and Intel Windows 11 supported processors, respectively.
Windows 11 Supported AMD Processors
AMD | 3015e |
AMD | 3020e |
Athlon™ | Gold 3150C |
Athlon™ | Gold 3150U |
Athlon™ | Silver 3050C |
Athlon™ | Silver 3050e |
Athlon™ | Silver 3050U |
Athlon™ | 3000G |
Athlon™ | 300GE |
Athlon™ | 300U |
Athlon™ | 320GE |
Athlon™ | Gold 3150G |
Athlon™ | Gold 3150GE |
Athlon™ | Silver 3050GE |
EPYC™ | 7232P |
EPYC™ | 7252 |
EPYC™ | 7262 |
EPYC™ | 7272 |
EPYC™ | 7282 |
EPYC™ | 7302 |
EPYC™ | 7302P |
EPYC™ | 7352 |
EPYC™ | 7402 |
EPYC™ | 7402P |
EPYC™ | 7452 |
EPYC™ | 7502 |
EPYC™ | 7502P |
EPYC™ | 7532 |
EPYC™ | 7542 |
EPYC™ | 7552 |
EPYC™ | 7642 |
EPYC™ | 7662 |
EPYC™ | 7702 |
EPYC™ | 7702P |
EPYC™ | 7742 |
EPYC™ | 7F32 |
EPYC™ | 7F52 |
EPYC™ | 7F72 |
EPYC™ | 7H12 |
EPYC™ | 72F3 |
EPYC™ | 7313 |
EPYC™ | 7313P |
EPYC™ | 7343 |
EPYC™ | 73F3 |
EPYC™ | 7413 |
EPYC™ | 7443 |
EPYC™ | 7443P |
EPYC™ | 7453 |
EPYC™ | 74F3 |
EPYC™ | 7513 |
EPYC™ | 7543 |
EPYC™ | 7543P |
EPYC™ | 75F3 |
EPYC™ | 7643 |
EPYC™ | 7663 |
EPYC™ | 7713 |
EPYC™ | 7713P |
EPYC™ | 7763 |
Ryzen™ 3 | 3250C |
Ryzen™ 3 | 3250U |
Ryzen™ 3 | 3200G with Radeon™ Vega 8 Graphics |
Ryzen™ 3 | 3200GE |
Ryzen™ 3 | 3200U |
Ryzen™ 3 | 3350U |
Ryzen™ 3 | 2300X |
Ryzen™ 3 | 5300U |
Ryzen™ 3 | 3100 |
Ryzen™ 3 | 3300U |
Ryzen™ 3 | 4300G |
Ryzen™ 3 | 4300GE |
Ryzen™ 3 | 4300U |
Ryzen™ 3 | 5400U |
Ryzen™ 3 PRO | 3200G |
Ryzen™ 3 PRO | 3200GE |
Ryzen™ 3 PRO | 3300U |
Ryzen™ 3 PRO | 4350G |
Ryzen™ 3 PRO | 4350GE |
Ryzen™ 3 PRO | 4450U |
Ryzen™ 3 PRO | 5450U |
Ryzen™ 5 | 3400G with Radeon™ RX Vega 11 Graphics |
Ryzen™ 5 | 3400GE |
Ryzen™ 5 | 3450U |
Ryzen™ 5 | 3500C |
Ryzen™ 5 | 3500U |
Ryzen™ 5 | 3550H |
Ryzen™ 5 | 3580U Microsoft Surface® Edition |
Ryzen™ 5 | 2500X |
Ryzen™ 5 | 2600 |
Ryzen™ 5 | 2600E |
Ryzen™ 5 | 2600X |
Ryzen™ 5 | 5500U |
Ryzen™ 5 | 3500 Processor |
Ryzen™ 5 | 3600 |
Ryzen™ 5 | 3600X |
Ryzen™ 5 | 3600XT |
Ryzen™ 5 | 4600G |
Ryzen™ 5 | 4500U |
Ryzen™ 5 | 4600GE |
Ryzen™ 5 | 4600H |
Ryzen™ 5 | 4600U |
Ryzen™ 5 | 5600H |
Ryzen™ 5 | 5600HS |
Ryzen™ 5 | 5600U |
Ryzen™ 5 | 5600X |
Ryzen™ 5 PRO | 3400G |
Ryzen™ 5 PRO | 3400GE |
Ryzen™ 5 PRO | 3500U |
Ryzen™ 5 PRO | 2600 |
Ryzen™ 5 PRO | 3600 |
Ryzen™ 5 PRO | 4650G |
Ryzen™ 5 PRO | 4650GE |
Ryzen™ 5 PRO | 4650U |
Ryzen™ 5 PRO | 5650U |
Ryzen™ 7 | 3700C |
Ryzen™ 7 | 3700U |
Ryzen™ 7 | 3750H |
Ryzen™ 7 | 3780U Microsoft Surface® Edition |
Ryzen™ 7 | 2700 |
Ryzen™ 7 | 2700E Processor |
Ryzen™ 7 | 2700X |
Ryzen™ 7 | 5700U |
Ryzen™ 7 | 3700X |
Ryzen™ 7 | 3800X |
Ryzen™ 7 | 3800XT |
Ryzen™ 7 | 4700G |
Ryzen™ 7 | 4700GE |
Ryzen™ 7 | 4700U |
Ryzen™ 7 | 4800H |
Ryzen™ 7 | 4800HS |
Ryzen™ 7 | 4800U |
Ryzen™ 7 | 5800H |
Ryzen™ 7 | 5800HS |
Ryzen™ 7 | 5800U |
Ryzen™ 7 | 5800 |
Ryzen™ 7 | 5800X |
Ryzen™ 7 PRO | 3700U |
Ryzen™ 7 PRO | 2700 |
Ryzen™ 7 PRO | 2700X |
Ryzen™ 7 PRO | 4750G |
Ryzen™ 7 PRO | 4750GE |
Ryzen™ 7 PRO | 4750U |
Ryzen™ 7 PRO | 5850U |
Ryzen™ 9 | 3900 Processor |
Ryzen™ 9 | 3900X |
Ryzen™ 9 | 3900XT |
Ryzen™ 9 | 3950X |
Ryzen™ 9 | 4900H |
Ryzen™ 9 | 4900HS |
Ryzen™ 9 | 5900HS |
Ryzen™ 9 | 5900HX |
Ryzen™ 9 | 5980HS |
Ryzen™ 9 | 5980HX |
Ryzen™ 9 | 5900 |
Ryzen™ 9 | 5900X |
Ryzen™ 9 | 5950X |
Ryzen™ 9 PRO | 3900 |
Ryzen™ Threadripper™ | 2920X |
Ryzen™ Threadripper™ | 2950X |
Ryzen™ Threadripper™ | 2970WX |
Ryzen™ Threadripper™ | 2990WX |
Ryzen™ Threadripper™ | 3960X |
Ryzen™ Threadripper™ | 3970X |
Ryzen™ Threadripper™ | 3990X |
Ryzen™ Threadripper™ PRO | 3945WX |
Ryzen™ Threadripper™ PRO | 3955WX |
Ryzen™ Threadripper™ PRO | 3975WX |
Ryzen™ Threadripper™ PRO | 3995WX |
Windows 11 Supported Intel Processors
Atom® | x6200FE |
Atom® | x6211E |
Atom® | x6212RE |
Atom® | x6413E |
Atom® | x6414RE |
Atom® | x6425E |
Atom® | x6425RE |
Atom® | x6427FE |
Celeron® | G4900 |
Celeron® | G4900T |
Celeron® | G4920 |
Celeron® | G4930 |
Celeron® | G4930E |
Celeron® | G4930T |
Celeron® | G4932E |
Celeron® | G4950 |
Celeron® | J4005 |
Celeron® | J4105 |
Celeron® | J4115 |
Celeron® | N4000 |
Celeron® | N4100 |
Celeron® | 3867U |
Celeron® | 4205U |
Celeron® | 4305U |
Celeron® | 4305UE |
Celeron® | J4025 |
Celeron® | J4125 |
Celeron® | N4020 |
Celeron® | N4120 |
Celeron® | 5205U |
Celeron® | 5305U |
Celeron® | G5900 |
Celeron® | G5900E |
Celeron® | G5900T |
Celeron® | G5900TE |
Celeron® | G5905 |
Celeron® | G5905T |
Celeron® | G5920 |
Celeron® | G5925 |
Celeron® | J6412 |
Celeron® | J6413 |
Celeron® | N6210 |
Celeron® | N6211 |
Celeron® | N4500 |
Celeron® | N4505 |
Celeron® | N5100 |
Celeron® | N5105 |
Celeron® | 6305 |
Celeron® | 6305E |
Core™ | i5-10210Y |
Core™ | i5-10310Y |
Core™ | i5-8200Y |
Core™ | i5-8210Y |
Core™ | i5-8310Y |
Core™ | i7-10510Y |
Core™ | i7-8500Y |
Core™ | m3-8100Y |
Core™ | i3-8100 |
Core™ | i3-8100B |
Core™ | i3-8100H |
Core™ | i3-8100T |
Core™ | i3-8109U |
Core™ | i3-8140U |
Core™ | i3-8300 |
Core™ | i3-8300T |
Core™ | i3-8350K |
Core™ | i5+8400 |
Core™ | i5+8500 |
Core™ | i5-8257U |
Core™ | i5-8259U |
Core™ | i5-8260U |
Core™ | i5-8269U |
Core™ | i5-8279U |
Core™ | i5-8300H |
Core™ | i5-8400 |
Core™ | i5-8400B |
Core™ | i5-8400H |
Core™ | i5-8400T |
Core™ | i5-8500 |
Core™ | i5-8500B |
Core™ | i5-8500T |
Core™ | i5-8600 |
Core™ | i5-8600K |
Core™ | i5-8600T |
Core™ | i7-8086K |
Core™ | i7-8557U |
Core™ | i7-8559U |
Core™ | i7-8569U |
Core™ | i7-8700 |
Core™ | i7-8700B |
Core™ | i7-8700K |
Core™ | i7-8700T |
Core™ | i7-8750H |
Core™ | i7-8850H |
Core™ | i3-8130U |
Core™ | i5-8250U |
Core™ | i5-8350U |
Core™ | i7-8550U |
Core™ | i7-8650U |
Core™ | i3-8145U |
Core™ | i3-8145UE |
Core™ | i5-8265U |
Core™ | i5-8365U |
Core™ | i5-8365UE |
Core™ | i7-8565U |
Core™ | i7-8665U |
Core™ | i7-8665UE |
Core™ | i3-9100 |
Core™ | i3-9100E |
Core™ | i3-9100F |
Core™ | i3-9100HL |
Core™ | i3-9100T |
Core™ | i3-9100TE |
Core™ | i3-9300 |
Core™ | i3-9300T |
Core™ | i3-9320 |
Core™ | i3-9350K |
Core™ | i3-9350KF |
Core™ | i5-9300H |
Core™ | i5-9300HF |
Core™ | i5-9400 |
Core™ | i5-9400F |
Core™ | i5-9400H |
Core™ | i5-9400T |
Core™ | i5-9500 |
Core™ | i5-9500E |
Core™ | i5-9500F |
Core™ | i5-9500T |
Core™ | i5-9500TE |
Core™ | i5-9600 |
Core™ | i5-9600K |
Core™ | i5-9600KF |
Core™ | i5-9600T |
Core™ | i7-9700 |
Core™ | i7-9700E |
Core™ | i7-9700F |
Core™ | i7-9700K |
Core™ | i7-9700KF |
Core™ | i7-9700T |
Core™ | i7-9700TE |
Core™ | i7-9750H |
Core™ | i7-9750HF |
Core™ | i7-9850H |
Core™ | i7-9850HE |
Core™ | i7-9850HL |
Core™ | i9-8950HK |
Core™ | i9-9880H |
Core™ | i9-9900 |
Core™ | i9-9900K |
Core™ | i9-9900KF |
Core™ | i9-9900KS |
Core™ | i9-9900T |
Core™ | i9-9980HK |
Core™ | i3-10100Y |
Core™ | i3-10110Y |
Core™ | i9-10900X |
Core™ | i9-10920X |
Core™ | i9-10940X |
Core™ | i9-10980XE |
Core™ | i3-10100 |
Core™ | i3-10100E |
Core™ | i3-10100F |
Core™ | i3-10100T |
Core™ | i3-10100TE |
Core™ | i3-10105 |
Core™ | i3-10105F |
Core™ | i3-10105T |
Core™ | i3-10110U |
Core™ | i3-10300 |
Core™ | i3-10300T |
Core™ | i3-10305 |
Core™ | i3-10305T |
Core™ | i3-10320 |
Core™ | i3-10325 |
Core™ | i5-10200H |
Core™ | i5-10210U |
Core™ | i5-10300H |
Core™ | i5-10310U |
Core™ | i5-10400 |
Core™ | i5-10400F |
Core™ | i5-10400H |
Core™ | i5-10400T |
Core™ | i5-10500 |
Core™ | i5-10500E |
Core™ | i5-10500H |
Core™ | i5-10500T |
Core™ | i5-10500TE |
Core™ | i5-10600 |
Core™ | i5-10600K |
Core™ | i5-10600KF |
Core™ | i5-10600T |
Core™ | i7-10510U |
Core™ | i7-10610U |
Core™ | i7-10700 |
Core™ | i7-10700E |
Core™ | i7-10700F |
Core™ | i7-10700K |
Core™ | i7-10700KF |
Core™ | i7-10700T |
Core™ | i7-10700TE |
Core™ | i7-10710U |
Core™ | i7-10750H |
Core™ | i7-10810U |
Core™ | i7-10850H |
Core™ | i7-10870H |
Core™ | i7-10875H |
Core™ | i9-10850K |
Core™ | i9-10885H |
Core™ | i9-10900 |
Core™ | i9-10900E |
Core™ | i9-10900F |
Core™ | i9-10900K |
Core™ | i9-10900KF |
Core™ | i9-10900T |
Core™ | i9-10900TE |
Core™ | i9-10980HK |
Core™ | i3-1000G1 |
Core™ | i3-1000G4 |
Core™ | i3-1005G1 |
Core™ | i5-1030G4 |
Core™ | i5-1030G7 |
Core™ | i5-1035G1 |
Core™ | i5-1035G4 |
Core™ | i5-1035G7 |
Core™ | i5-1038NG7 |
Core™ | i7-1060G7 |
Core™ | i7-1065G7 |
Core™ | i7-1068NG7 |
Core™ | i3-L13G4 |
Core™ | i5-L16G7 |
Core™ | i5-11400 |
Core™ | i5-11400F |
Core™ | i5-11400T |
Core™ | i5-11500 |
Core™ | i5-11500T |
Core™ | i5-11600 |
Core™ | i5-11600K |
Core™ | i5-11600KF |
Core™ | i5-11600T |
Core™ | i7-11700 |
Core™ | i7-11700F |
Core™ | i7-11700K |
Core™ | i7-11700KF |
Core™ | i7-11700T |
Core™ | i9-11900 |
Core™ | i9-11900F |
Core™ | i9-11900K |
Core™ | i9-11900KF |
Core™ | i9-11900T |
Core™ | i3-1110G4 |
Core™ | i3-1115G4 |
Core™ | i3-1115G4E |
Core™ | i3-1115GRE |
Core™ | i3-1120G4 |
Core™ | i3-1125G4 |
Core™ | i5-11300H |
Core™ | i5-1130G7 |
Core™ | i5-1135G7 |
Core™ | i5-1140G7 |
Core™ | i5-1145G7 |
Core™ | i5-1145G7E |
Core™ | i5-1145GRE |
Core™ | i7-11370H |
Core™ | i7-11375H |
Core™ | i7-1160G7 |
Core™ | i7-1165G7 |
Core™ | i7-1180G7 |
Core™ | i7-1185G7 |
Core™ | i7-1185G7E |
Core™ | i7-1185GRE |
Pentium® | Gold 4425Y |
Pentium® | Gold 6500Y |
Pentium® | Gold G5400 |
Pentium® | Gold G5400T |
Pentium® | Gold G5420 |
Pentium® | Gold G5420T |
Pentium® | Gold G5500 |
Pentium® | Gold G5500T |
Pentium® | Gold G5600 |
Pentium® | Gold G5600T |
Pentium® | Gold G5620 |
Pentium® | Silver J5005 |
Pentium® | Silver N5000 |
Pentium® | Gold 4417U |
Pentium® | Gold 5405U |
Pentium® | Silver J5040 |
Pentium® | Silver N5030 |
Pentium® | Gold 6405U |
Pentium® | Gold G6400 |
Pentium® | Gold G6400E |
Pentium® | Gold G6400T |
Pentium® | Gold G6400TE |
Pentium® | Gold G6405 |
Pentium® | Gold G6405T |
Pentium® | Gold G6500 |
Pentium® | Gold G6500T |
Pentium® | Gold G6505 |
Pentium® | Gold G6505T |
Pentium® | Gold G6600 |
Pentium® | Gold G6605 |
Pentium® | 6805 |
Pentium® | J6426 |
Pentium® | N6415 |
Pentium® | Silver N6000 |
Pentium® | Silver N6005 |
Pentium® | Gold 7505 |
Xeon® | Bronze 3104 |
Xeon® | Bronze 3106 |
Xeon® | Gold 5115 |
Xeon® | Gold 5118 |
Xeon® | Gold 5119T |
Xeon® | Gold 5120 |
Xeon® | Gold 5120T |
Xeon® | Gold 5122 |
Xeon® | Gold 6126 |
Xeon® | Gold 6126F |
Xeon® | Gold 6126T |
Xeon® | Gold 6128 |
Xeon® | Gold 6130 |
Xeon® | Gold 6130F |
Xeon® | Gold 6130T |
Xeon® | Gold 6132 |
Xeon® | Gold 6134 |
Xeon® | Gold 6136 |
Xeon® | Gold 6138 |
Xeon® | Gold 6138F |
Xeon® | Gold 6138P |
Xeon® | Gold 6138T |
Xeon® | Gold 6140 |
Xeon® | Gold 6142 |
Xeon® | Gold 6142F |
Xeon® | Gold 6144 |
Xeon® | Gold 6146 |
Xeon® | Gold 6148 |
Xeon® | Gold 6148F |
Xeon® | Gold 6150 |
Xeon® | Gold 6152 |
Xeon® | Gold 6154 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8153 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8156 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8158 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8160 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8160F |
Xeon® | Platinum 8160T |
Xeon® | Platinum 8164 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8168 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8170 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8176 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8176F |
Xeon® | Platinum 8180 |
Xeon® | Silver 4108 |
Xeon® | Silver 4109T |
Xeon® | Silver 4110 |
Xeon® | Silver 4112 |
Xeon® | Silver 4114 |
Xeon® | Silver 4114T |
Xeon® | Silver 4116 |
Xeon® | Silver 4116T |
Xeon® | E-2124 |
Xeon® | E-2124G |
Xeon® | E-2126G |
Xeon® | E-2134 |
Xeon® | E-2136 |
Xeon® | E-2144G |
Xeon® | E-2146G |
Xeon® | E-2174G |
Xeon® | E-2176G |
Xeon® | E-2176M |
Xeon® | E-2186G |
Xeon® | E-2186M |
Xeon® | E-2224 |
Xeon® | E-2224G |
Xeon® | E-2226G |
Xeon® | E-2226GE |
Xeon® | E-2234 |
Xeon® | E-2236 |
Xeon® | E-2244G |
Xeon® | E-2246G |
Xeon® | E-2254ME |
Xeon® | E-2254ML |
Xeon® | E-2274G |
Xeon® | E-2276G |
Xeon® | E-2276M |
Xeon® | E-2276ME |
Xeon® | E-2276ML |
Xeon® | E-2278G |
Xeon® | E-2278GE |
Xeon® | E-2278GEL |
Xeon® | E-2286G |
Xeon® | E-2286M |
Xeon® | E-2288G |
Xeon® | Bronze 3204 |
Xeon® | Bronze 3206R |
Xeon® | Gold 5215 |
Xeon® | Gold 5215L |
Xeon® | Gold 5217 |
Xeon® | Gold 5218B |
Xeon® | Gold 5218N |
Xeon® | Gold 5218R |
Xeon® | Gold 5218T |
Xeon® | Gold 5220 |
Xeon® | Gold 5220R |
Xeon® | Gold 5220S |
Xeon® | Gold 5220T |
Xeon® | Gold 5222 |
Xeon® | Gold 6208U |
Xeon® | Gold 6209U |
Xeon® | Gold 6210U |
Xeon® | Gold 6212U |
Xeon® | Gold 6222V |
Xeon® | Gold 6226 |
Xeon® | Gold 6226R |
Xeon® | Gold 6230 |
Xeon® | Gold 6230N |
Xeon® | Gold 6230R |
Xeon® | Gold 6230T |
Xeon® | Gold 6238 |
Xeon® | Gold 6238L |
Xeon® | Gold 6238T |
Xeon® | Gold 6240 |
Xeon® | Gold 6240L |
Xeon® | Gold 6240R |
Xeon® | Gold 6240Y |
Xeon® | Gold 6242 |
Xeon® | Gold 6242R |
Xeon® | Gold 6244 |
Xeon® | Gold 6246R |
Xeon® | Gold 6248 |
Xeon® | Gold 6248R |
Xeon® | Gold 6250 |
Xeon® | Gold 6250L |
Xeon® | Gold 6252 |
Xeon® | Gold 6252N |
Xeon® | Gold 6254 |
Xeon® | Gold 6256 |
Xeon® | Gold 6258R |
Xeon® | Gold 6262V |
Xeon® | Gold Gold 5218 |
Xeon® | Gold Gold 6238R |
Xeon® | Gold6246 |
Xeon® | Goldv 6234 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8253 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8256 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8260 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8260L |
Xeon® | Platinum 8260Y |
Xeon® | Platinum 8268 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8270 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8276 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8276L |
Xeon® | Platinum 8280 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8280L |
Xeon® | Platinum 9221 |
Xeon® | Platinum 9222 |
Xeon® | Platinum 9242 |
Xeon® | Platinum 9282 |
Xeon® | Silver 4208 |
Xeon® | Silver 4209T |
Xeon® | Silver 4210 |
Xeon® | Silver 4210R |
Xeon® | Silver 4210T |
Xeon® | Silver 4214 |
Xeon® | Silver 4214R |
Xeon® | Silver 4214Y |
Xeon® | Silver 4215 |
Xeon® | Silver 4215R |
Xeon® | Silver 4216 |
Xeon® | W-2223 |
Xeon® | W-2225 |
Xeon® | W-2235 |
Xeon® | W-2245 |
Xeon® | W-2255 |
Xeon® | W-2265 |
Xeon® | W-2275 |
Xeon® | W-2295 |
Xeon® | W-3223 |
Xeon® | W-3225 |
Xeon® | W-3235 |
Xeon® | W-3245 |
Xeon® | W-3245M |
Xeon® | W-3265 |
Xeon® | W-3265M |
Xeon® | W-3275 |
Xeon® | W-3275M |
Xeon® | W-10855M |
Xeon® | W-10885M |
Xeon® | W-1250 |
Xeon® | W-1250E |
Xeon® | W-1250P |
Xeon® | W-1250TE |
Xeon® | W-1270 |
Xeon® | W-1270E |
Xeon® | W-1270P |
Xeon® | W-1270TE |
Xeon® | W-1290 |
Xeon® | W-1290E |
Xeon® | W-1290P |
Xeon® | W-1290T |
Xeon® | W-1290TE |
Xeon® | Gold 5315Y |
Xeon® | Gold 5317 |
Xeon® | Gold 5318N |
Xeon® | Gold 5318S |
Xeon® | Gold 5320 |
Xeon® | Gold 5320T |
Xeon® | Gold 6312U |
Xeon® | Gold 6314U |
Xeon® | Gold 6326 |
Xeon® | Gold 6330 |
Xeon® | Gold 6330N |
Xeon® | Gold 6334 |
Xeon® | Gold 6336Y |
Xeon® | Gold 6338 |
Xeon® | Gold 6338N |
Xeon® | Gold 6338T |
Xeon® | Gold 6342 |
Xeon® | Gold 6346 |
Xeon® | Gold 6348 |
Xeon® | Gold 6354 |
Xeon® | Gold Gold 5318Y |
Xeon® | Platinum 8351N |
Xeon® | Platinum 8352S |
Xeon® | Platinum 8352V |
Xeon® | Platinum 8352Y |
Xeon® | Platinum 8358 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8358P |
Xeon® | Platinum 8360Y |
Xeon® | Platinum 8368 |
Xeon® | Platinum 8368Q |
Xeon® | Platinum 8380 |
Xeon® | Silver 4309Y |
Xeon® | Silver 4310 |
Xeon® | Silver 4310T |
Xeon® | Silver 4314 |
Xeon® | Silver 4316 |
Source: ASUS
Home » PC Tech & Gaming News » ASUS Release Windows 11 Compatible Motherboards (TPM 2.0 Support)
ASUS unveil list of Windows 11 compatible motherboards that includes all boards with TPM 2.0 support.
- Updated: Jul 5, 2021
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Last Updated:
There has been plenty of speculation in the past few days surrounding what hardware will and will not be compatible with Microsoft’s new Windows 11 operating system. Microsoft obviously dropped the TPM 2.0 bombshell last week, sending Windows users into a crazed frenzy, researching what TPM was, whether their PC supports TPM, and how to enable TPM 2.0 in BIOS.
Luckily, manufacturers have picked up on this, and have already started listing compatible motherboards to try and make your life that little bit easier. The first to do it seems to be ASUS, posting a comprehensive list of motherboards that will indeed support Windows 11 and TPM support.
ASUS has also recently updated its FAQs to include answers for Windows 11 motherboard compatibility.
ASUS Windows 11 Compatible Motherboards
Before we go over the list of compatible motherboards, it’s worth touching on the disclaimer ASUS released alongside the list:
“Windows 11 has not been officially released and there might be stability issues with the Insider Preview build as it has not passed formal hardware validation and qualification. The installation or upgrade to the Windows 11 Insider Preview or any third-party software is done at your own discretion and risk. You will be solely responsible for any damage to your system or loss of data that results from that activity. ASUS will not be liable for any losses and damages in connection with the use of Windows 11.”
This is often the case with any new major operating system upgrade, so don’t be too alarmed. Chances are, by the time Windows 11 is properly released, many of the bugs and compatibility issues will have been ironed out.
With that in mind, here is a list of all the TPM 2.0 supported ASUS motherboards:
Intel platform | AMD platform |
---|---|
C621 Series | WRX80 Series |
C422 Series | TRX40 Series |
X299 Series | X570 Series |
Z590 Series | B550 Series |
Q570 Series | A520 Series |
H570 Series | X470 Series |
B560 Series | B450 Series |
H510 Series | X370 Series |
Z490 Series | B350 Series |
Q470 Series | A320 Series |
H470 Series | |
B460 Series | |
H410 Series | |
W480 Series | |
Z390 Series | |
Z370 Series | |
H370 Series | |
B365 Series | |
B360 Series | |
H310 Series | |
Q370 Series | |
C246 Series |
As you can see from the list above, ASUS has a tonne of motherboards that support Windows 11 compatibility – for both Intel and AMD processors. You can check our complete Windows 11 CPU compatibility list here.
Why Do I Need TPM 2.0 Support?
This has been the big talking point over the last couple of weeks and it’s easy to see why. In Microsoft’s Windows 11 System requirements, it clearly states that TPM 2.0 is a base requirement for Windows 11. However, not every motherboard supports TPM 2.0 – exactly what brands like ASUS are publishing compatibility lists.
TPM 2.0 ensures full compatibility with BitLocker and SecureBoot for Windows 11. It’s a secure cryptoprocessor that is internationally recognized by all computers – albeit disabled by default on most major motherboards which does cause issues with the installation of Windows 11. Whether or not TPM 2.0 will be a requirement come the official release date is yet to be seen, however, it has certainly caused a stir in numerous forums.
Summary
Charlie has been with WePC for nearly 5 years now, becoming a senior tech writer in 2021. He started off writing monitor and TV reviews, but quickly moved into a more affiliate-based role.
After finishing College, Charlie pursued his joy of PC gaming by building several PCs for his favourite game, Counter-Strike.
To this day, Charlie continues to enjoy gaming and PC building inside and outside of the office.
Experience
Charlie started his career with BGFG after a long 5-year stint traveling Asia, Australia, and New Zealand. While he could have pursued a further career in the building trade, he decided to delve into the world of PC gaming and journalism. Being a keen gamer and PC builder, it was easy to transition between the two industries. After showcasing a real joy for both writing and PC building, he was moved into a more senior position, which he continues to hold to this day.
Education
Charlie completed his A levels at Culcheth College. After, he took a 5-year break to travel and work overseas.
Interests
Aside from building PCs and getting beat by Russian teens on CS:GO, Charlie’s other interests include travelling, socializing with friends, and cooking. He also spends too much time buying and selling products — his latest project is Pokemon cards.
Gaming Setup
CPU — AMD 7800X3D
Motherboard — X670 Gaming Plus
RAM — Corsair Vengeance LPX 32GB 5200MHz
GPU — ASUS ROG Strix RX 7700XT
PSU — Thermaltake 750W 80+ Gold
Case — Corsair Carbide (275R)
A decent upgrade over previous machines, and one that is, let’s be honest, wasted on me as the majority of my time is spent editing content and playing CS2
Favorite Games
CS2
PUBG
Rising Storm
Beyond The Wire
-
-
#2
Thanks @Brink!
Although I am already running Windows 11 on an ASUS board, this alerted me to the new BIOS version. I hope they will update the drivers soon enough too, for now (at least for my board) only Windows 10 drivers are available and some of them (specifically Realtek) appear to be outdated already.
-
- OS
- Windows 10
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- CPU
- i5-10600K
- Motherboard
- Asus Rog Strix Z490-A Gaming
- Memory
- 16 GB
- Graphics Card(s)
- GeForce GTX 1650
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Samsung U32J59x 32″ 4K
- Screen Resolution
- 3840×2160
-
-
#3
by the way, most of these «new» BIOS are only setting win11 requirements as default, even on chipsets Microsoft has not OK’d, so if you already have UEFI, Windows 10 boot, and PTT turned on, and no other new things added, for «system stability»(usually an update to RAM XMP settings), there is no need to update the BIOS and have to go through the rig-a-marole of resetting up everything else in the BIOS(something I really hate, even though I have a text file copy of all my OC settings).
-
- OS
- Win10 Pro, Win10 Pro N, Win10 Home, Windows 8.1 Pro, Ubuntu
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- ۞ΞЖ†ԘΜΞ۞
- CPU
- Intel Core i9 9900K
- Motherboard
- ASUS ROG Maximus X Hero
- Memory
- 32 GB Quad Kit, G.Skill Trident Z RGB Series schwarz, DDR4-3866, 18-19-19-39-2T
- Graphics Card(s)
- ASUS GeForce RTX 3090 ROG Strix O24G, 24576 MB GDDR6X
- Sound Card
- (1) HD Webcam C270 (2) NVIDIA High Definition Audio (3) Realtek High Definition Audio
- Monitor(s) Displays
- BenQ BL2711U(4K) and a hp 27vx(1080p)
- Hard Drives
- C: Samsung 960 EVO NVMe M.2 SSD
E: & O: Libraries & OneDrive-> Samsung 850 EVO 1TB
D: Hyper-V VM’s -> Samsung PM951 Client M.2 512Gb SSD
G: System Images -> Samsung 860 Pro 2TB
- PSU
- Corsair HX1000i High Performance ATX Power Supply 80+ Platinum
- Case
- Phanteks Enthoo Pro TG
- Cooling
- Thermaltake Floe Riing RGB TT Premium-Edition 360mm and 2×120 Phantek& Halo front, and 1×140 Phanteks
- Keyboard
- Trust GTX THURA
- Mouse
- Trust GTX 148
- Internet Speed
- 25+/5+ (+usually faster)
- Browser
- Edge; Chrome;
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender of course & Malwarebytes Anti-Exploit as an added layer between browser & OS
- Other Info
- Router: FRITZ!Box 7590 AX V2
Sound system: SHARP HT-SBW460 Dolby Atmos Soundbar
Webcam: Logitech BRIO ULTRA HD PRO WEBCAM 4K webcam with HDR
-
-
#4
Thanks Shawn I will get the latest BIOS.
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Self Built
- CPU
- Ryzen 9 3900x
- Motherboard
- Asus Strix x570-E
- Memory
- Corsair Dominator Platinum 32Gb@3600MHz
- Graphics Card(s)
- Asus Strix 3080 Ti OC
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Samsung Odyssey G7 32″ Curved Gaming Monitor, IIYAMA XUB2792QSU-W1 27″
- Screen Resolution
- 2560×1440@240Hz, 2560×1440@70Hz
- Hard Drives
- Samsung 980 Pro 1 Tb (OS), Samsung 970 Pro 1 Tb (games), Samsung 860 Evo 1Tb (data), Samsung 860 Evo 4 Tb (games), Crucial MX500 1Tb (photos), Synology DS920+ 32 Tb NAS.
- PSU
- Corsair RM850x
- Case
- Corsair Crystal 680x
- Cooling
- Corsair H100i Se Platinum, 8 Corsair QL120/140 fans
- Keyboard
- Corsair K70 RGB Mk 2 SE Rapid Fire
- Mouse
- Corsair M65 Elite
- Internet Speed
- 58/12 Mbps
- Browser
- Microsoft Edge
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender + Malwarebytes
- Other Info
- Astro a50 Headset, Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 Tablet.
Creative T6300 5.1 Speakers. TPM 2.0 Module.
-
- Operating System
- Arch Linux KDE
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Self Built
- CPU
- Ryzen 5600x
- Motherboard
- Asus Strix B550-E
- Memory
- Corsair Vengeance 32Gb@3200MHz
- Graphics card(s)
- Gigabyte RTX2070 Super Gaming OC
- Sound Card
- Creative Soundblaster AE-5
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Asus Strix XG43VQ 43″ Ultrawide
- Screen Resolution
- 3840×1200 @ 120Mhz
- Hard Drives
- Aorus Gen 4 NVMe 1 Tb (Windows Insider), Samsung 850 Pro 512Gb (data), Samsung 850 Evo 1Tb (backups), Samsung 860 Evo 2Tb (Home folder), Blu-ray player
- PSU
- Corsair RM750i
- Case
- Fractal Define R6
- Cooling
- Scythe Mugen 5 rev B and Corsair QL fans
- Mouse
- Glorious Model D
- Keyboard
- Corsair K70 RGB MK.2 Low Profile Rapidfire
- Internet Speed
- 58/12 Mbps
- Browser
- Microsoft Edge
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender + Malwarebytes
- Other Info
- Corsair Virtuoso Headset
-
-
#5
Had a BIOS update the other day for mine. rog-strix-b360-g-gaming
-
- OS
- Win 11 Pro 26100.3915
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Custom
- CPU
- Intel i5-12400F
- Motherboard
- MSI PRO B760M P
- Memory
- 2 x16gb DDR4 Patriot Viper Elite II 4000MHz
- Graphics Card(s)
- Gigabyte 1660Ti
- Sound Card
- onboard
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Acer 32inch, 60Hz
- Screen Resolution
- 2560×1440
- Hard Drives
- 1x SP 512GB NVMe (Windows)
1x Gammix 240gb NVME (Macrium Backups)
1x 2TB SSD (Downloads)
1x 2TB BX500 (Games)
1x 1TB NVME (Steam)
- PSU
- CORSAIR RM650 80 PLUS Gold Fully Modular
- Case
- Corsair Carbide 100R
- Cooling
- Stock Intel
- Keyboard
- HyperX RGB
- Mouse
- Red Dragon 612 Predator
- Internet Speed
- 100/40
- Browser
- Chrome
- Antivirus
- Windows
-
-
#6
I’m waiting to see the new X570S motherboards from Asus soon to be released which do not have a chipset fan.
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Self build
- CPU
- Core i7-13700K
- Motherboard
- Asus TUF Gaming Plus WiFi Z790
- Memory
- 64 GB Kingston Fury Beast DDR5
- Graphics Card(s)
- Gigabyte GeForce RTX 2060 Super Gaming OC 8G
- Sound Card
- Realtek S1200A
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Viewsonic VP2770
- Screen Resolution
- 2560 x 1440
- Hard Drives
- Kingston KC3000 2TB NVME SSD & SATA HDDs & SSD
- PSU
- EVGA SuperNova G2 850W
- Case
- Nanoxia Deep Silence 1
- Cooling
- Noctua NH-D14
- Keyboard
- Microsoft Digital Media Pro
- Mouse
- Logitech Wireless
- Internet Speed
- 50 Mb / s
- Browser
- Chrome
- Antivirus
- Defender
-
-
#7
I’m waiting to see the new X570S motherboards from Asus soon to be released which do not have a chipset fan.
I rarely hear either of mine.
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Self Built
- CPU
- Ryzen 9 3900x
- Motherboard
- Asus Strix x570-E
- Memory
- Corsair Dominator Platinum 32Gb@3600MHz
- Graphics Card(s)
- Asus Strix 3080 Ti OC
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Samsung Odyssey G7 32″ Curved Gaming Monitor, IIYAMA XUB2792QSU-W1 27″
- Screen Resolution
- 2560×1440@240Hz, 2560×1440@70Hz
- Hard Drives
- Samsung 980 Pro 1 Tb (OS), Samsung 970 Pro 1 Tb (games), Samsung 860 Evo 1Tb (data), Samsung 860 Evo 4 Tb (games), Crucial MX500 1Tb (photos), Synology DS920+ 32 Tb NAS.
- PSU
- Corsair RM850x
- Case
- Corsair Crystal 680x
- Cooling
- Corsair H100i Se Platinum, 8 Corsair QL120/140 fans
- Keyboard
- Corsair K70 RGB Mk 2 SE Rapid Fire
- Mouse
- Corsair M65 Elite
- Internet Speed
- 58/12 Mbps
- Browser
- Microsoft Edge
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender + Malwarebytes
- Other Info
- Astro a50 Headset, Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 Tablet.
Creative T6300 5.1 Speakers. TPM 2.0 Module.
-
- Operating System
- Arch Linux KDE
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Self Built
- CPU
- Ryzen 5600x
- Motherboard
- Asus Strix B550-E
- Memory
- Corsair Vengeance 32Gb@3200MHz
- Graphics card(s)
- Gigabyte RTX2070 Super Gaming OC
- Sound Card
- Creative Soundblaster AE-5
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Asus Strix XG43VQ 43″ Ultrawide
- Screen Resolution
- 3840×1200 @ 120Mhz
- Hard Drives
- Aorus Gen 4 NVMe 1 Tb (Windows Insider), Samsung 850 Pro 512Gb (data), Samsung 850 Evo 1Tb (backups), Samsung 860 Evo 2Tb (Home folder), Blu-ray player
- PSU
- Corsair RM750i
- Case
- Fractal Define R6
- Cooling
- Scythe Mugen 5 rev B and Corsair QL fans
- Mouse
- Glorious Model D
- Keyboard
- Corsair K70 RGB MK.2 Low Profile Rapidfire
- Internet Speed
- 58/12 Mbps
- Browser
- Microsoft Edge
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender + Malwarebytes
- Other Info
- Corsair Virtuoso Headset
-
-
#8
In fact, ASUS gives you full control over each and every fan on your board, you can even turn them off completely. Mine are set to some low noise profile, such that I can hardly hear them even at night, when there is no other noise.
-
- OS
- Windows 10
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- CPU
- i5-10600K
- Motherboard
- Asus Rog Strix Z490-A Gaming
- Memory
- 16 GB
- Graphics Card(s)
- GeForce GTX 1650
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Samsung U32J59x 32″ 4K
- Screen Resolution
- 3840×2160
-
-
#9
I have a ROG Strix Z390-E Gaming mobo running Windows 11 via the insider program and there indeed was a new BIOS version just put out. It does TWO things, it automatically enables firmware TPM in the PCH-FW config AND it adds a Trusted Computing config with several more choices and information about TPM and its ilk.
EDIT: I heard from geneo that the Trusted Computer config ONLY shows up when PTT is enabled.
Last edited:
-
- OS
- Windows 11
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- home built
- CPU
- i7-12700K
- Motherboard
- ASUS Rog Strix Z690-F Gaming
- Memory
- 64GB
- Graphics Card(s)
- ASUS TUF RTX 4090 OC card
- Sound Card
- none Headphones ASUS 7.1 Surround
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Gigabyte M32U 32 inch 4k IPS 144Hz monitor
- Screen Resolution
- 3340 by 2160 144 Hz with HDR 10
- Hard Drives
- 2TB Samsung 980 Pro NVME, 3X Samsung 4TB 860 EVO
- PSU
- EVGA 850 Modular
- Case
- Corsair Graphite 780T
- Cooling
- Cooler Master Hyper air
- Keyboard
- Corsair K95 RGB
- Mouse
- Logitech G502 wired
- Internet Speed
- 990Mbps up/down Fiber to the home
- Browser
- Chrome
- Antivirus
- MS Defender
-
-
#10
I have a ROG Strix Z390-E Gaming mobo running Windows 11 via the insider program and there indeed was a new BIOS version just put out. It does TWO things, it automatically enables firmware TPM in the PCH-FW config AND it adds a Trusted Computing config with several more choices and information about TPM and its ilk.
When you enable PTT in the BIOS it reveals the Trusted Computing configuration tab/page. This is true for all BIOS that have PTT. I am just saying it is nothing new.
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro x64
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- DIY Photoshop/Audio/Game/tinker build
- CPU
- Intel i9 13900KS P/E cores 5.7/4.4 GHz, cache 5.0 GHz
- Motherboard
- Asus ROG Maximus Z790 Dark Hero
- Memory
- 96GB (2×48) G.skill Ripjaws 6800 MT/s
- Graphics Card(s)
- Asus ROG Strix 4070 Ti OC
- Sound Card
- Bowers & Wilkins 606 S3 speakers; Audiolabs 7000a integrated amp; Logan Martin Sub; Creative Pebble Pro Minimilist
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Eizo CG2730 ColorEdge, ViewSonic VP2768
- Screen Resolution
- 2560 x 1440p x 2
- Hard Drives
- WDC SN850X 4TB nvme, SN850 1TB nvme, SK-Hynix 2 TB P41 nvme,. Sabrent USB-C DS-SC5B 5-bay docking station: 6TB WDC Black, 6TB Ironwolf Pro; 2x 2TB WDC Black HDD
- PSU
- 850W Seasonic Vertex PX-850 ATX 3.0/PCI-E 5.0
- Case
- Fractal Design North XL Mesh, Black Walnut
- Cooling
- EKWB 360 Nucleus Dark AIO w/Phanteks T30-120 fans, 1 Noctua NF-A14 Chromax case fan, 1 T30-120 fan cooling memory
- Keyboard
- Keychron Q3 Max TKL with custom GMK Redsuns Red Samuri keycaps, TX Stabs
- Mouse
- Logitech G305 wireless gaming
- Internet Speed
- 500 Mb/s down, 12 Mb/s up
- Browser
- Firefox
- Antivirus
- Defender, Macrium Reflect X
- Other Info
- Runs hot. LOL. SP: P116/E93/M93
Phangkey Amaterasu V2 Desk Mat
-
- Computer type
- Laptop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Apple 13″ Macbook Pro 2020 (m1)
- CPU
- Apple M1
- Screen Resolution
- 2560×1600
- Browser
- Firefox
-
-
#11
When you enable PTT in the BIOS it reveals the Trusted Computing configuration tab/page. This is true for all BIOS that have PTT. I am just saying it is nothing new.
Since I never had the PTT enabled, no wonder I thought it was something added to the BIOS. That whole Trusted Computing config is NOT in the Z390 manual. Thanks for clarifying that for me.
-
- OS
- Windows 11
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- home built
- CPU
- i7-12700K
- Motherboard
- ASUS Rog Strix Z690-F Gaming
- Memory
- 64GB
- Graphics Card(s)
- ASUS TUF RTX 4090 OC card
- Sound Card
- none Headphones ASUS 7.1 Surround
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Gigabyte M32U 32 inch 4k IPS 144Hz monitor
- Screen Resolution
- 3340 by 2160 144 Hz with HDR 10
- Hard Drives
- 2TB Samsung 980 Pro NVME, 3X Samsung 4TB 860 EVO
- PSU
- EVGA 850 Modular
- Case
- Corsair Graphite 780T
- Cooling
- Cooler Master Hyper air
- Keyboard
- Corsair K95 RGB
- Mouse
- Logitech G502 wired
- Internet Speed
- 990Mbps up/down Fiber to the home
- Browser
- Chrome
- Antivirus
- MS Defender
-
-
#12
Asus Windows 11 bios updates are just enablement switches for PTT
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- CPU
- Intel® Core™ i9-12900K Desktop Processor 16 (8P+8E)
- Motherboard
- Asus TUF Gaming Z790-PLUS WIFI D4
- Memory
- G.Skill Ripjaws V Series 32gb (2x16gb) DDR4 3200mhz
- Graphics Card(s)
- Asus Dual Geforce Rtx™ 3060 TI Edition 8gb Gddr6
- Monitor(s) Displays
- BenQ EW3270U 31.5” 3840×2160 UHD 16:9 HDR LED 4K LG 27UK850-W 27» 4K UHD IPS LED Monitor with HDR10
- Screen Resolution
- 3840×2160
- Hard Drives
- Samsung 990 with heatsink PRO PCIe 4.0 Gen 4 NVMe® SSD 1TB
WD_BLACK SN850X NVMe M.2 2280 1TB PCI-Express 4.0
Crucial T500 2TB Gen4
Samsung 970 Evo M.2 2280 2tb Pcie Gen3. X4
- PSU
- Corsair AXi Series AX860i Digital 860W 80 PLUS PSU
- Case
- Fractal Meshify C ATX Mid Tower Case
- Keyboard
- Logi MX Keys
- Mouse
- Logi M705
- Internet Speed
- 400 mbs
- Browser
- Firefox
- Antivirus
- Eset NOD32
- Other Info
- Love fast boots
-
-
#13
I just did an update to my BIOS and TPM 2 was enabled by default and secure boot was turned on. Happy with the update and good on Asus for getting that ready for it’s customers.
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Home(Beta) — 24H2 — 26120.3941
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Banana Junior 5600-G Series
- CPU
- AMD Ryzen 5 5600G
- Motherboard
- Asus ROG Strix B550-F
- Memory
- G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 64GB 4×16
- Graphics Card(s)
- Nvidia geforce gtx titan x
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 28″ ASUS VP28U 4k
- Screen Resolution
- 4K, 1080p
- Hard Drives
- Primary SAMSUNG 970 EVO Plus
- PSU
- EVGA BQ 700w 80+ Bronze
- Case
- Zalman i3 NEO
- Cooling
- ARCTIC Freezer 7 X
- Keyboard
- Corsair
- Mouse
- Amazon Generic with Cord
- Internet Speed
- Download: 295.11 mbps Upload: 65.35 mbps T-Mobile Internet
- Browser
- Firefox and Edge
- Antivirus
- MS — Defender
- Other Info
- Speakers: Klipsch ProMedia 2.1
-
-
#14
I just did an update to my BIOS and TPM 2 was enabled by default and secure boot was turned on. Happy with the update and good on Asus for getting that ready for it’s customers.
I’m a big Asus fan, have been for 20 plus years, except not everyone sees it the same way. Asus should at least mention in bios update what gets enabled so that those who don’t want the bios update can either turn it off or skip the bios update.
Some users complained of slower starts with TPM enabled and are looking to find what to turn off.
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- CPU
- Intel® Core™ i9-12900K Desktop Processor 16 (8P+8E)
- Motherboard
- Asus TUF Gaming Z790-PLUS WIFI D4
- Memory
- G.Skill Ripjaws V Series 32gb (2x16gb) DDR4 3200mhz
- Graphics Card(s)
- Asus Dual Geforce Rtx™ 3060 TI Edition 8gb Gddr6
- Monitor(s) Displays
- BenQ EW3270U 31.5” 3840×2160 UHD 16:9 HDR LED 4K LG 27UK850-W 27» 4K UHD IPS LED Monitor with HDR10
- Screen Resolution
- 3840×2160
- Hard Drives
- Samsung 990 with heatsink PRO PCIe 4.0 Gen 4 NVMe® SSD 1TB
WD_BLACK SN850X NVMe M.2 2280 1TB PCI-Express 4.0
Crucial T500 2TB Gen4
Samsung 970 Evo M.2 2280 2tb Pcie Gen3. X4
- PSU
- Corsair AXi Series AX860i Digital 860W 80 PLUS PSU
- Case
- Fractal Meshify C ATX Mid Tower Case
- Keyboard
- Logi MX Keys
- Mouse
- Logi M705
- Internet Speed
- 400 mbs
- Browser
- Firefox
- Antivirus
- Eset NOD32
- Other Info
- Love fast boots
-
-
#15
I’m a big Asus fan, have been for 20 plus years, except not everyone sees it the same way. Asus should at least mention in bios update what gets enabled so that those who don’t want the bios update can either turn it off or skip the bios update.
Some users complained of slower starts with TPM enabled and are looking to find what to turn off.
That would be nice but I doubt TPM 2 will slow down a boot that much if at all. People just look for reasons to complain and now with TPM 2 we have one more.
IMO, Asus makes some of the best parts for PC’s epically motherboards I’m very happy with mine.
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Home(Beta) — 24H2 — 26120.3941
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Banana Junior 5600-G Series
- CPU
- AMD Ryzen 5 5600G
- Motherboard
- Asus ROG Strix B550-F
- Memory
- G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 64GB 4×16
- Graphics Card(s)
- Nvidia geforce gtx titan x
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 28″ ASUS VP28U 4k
- Screen Resolution
- 4K, 1080p
- Hard Drives
- Primary SAMSUNG 970 EVO Plus
- PSU
- EVGA BQ 700w 80+ Bronze
- Case
- Zalman i3 NEO
- Cooling
- ARCTIC Freezer 7 X
- Keyboard
- Corsair
- Mouse
- Amazon Generic with Cord
- Internet Speed
- Download: 295.11 mbps Upload: 65.35 mbps T-Mobile Internet
- Browser
- Firefox and Edge
- Antivirus
- MS — Defender
- Other Info
- Speakers: Klipsch ProMedia 2.1
-
-
#16
Well it does, just go to ROG forum
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- CPU
- Intel® Core™ i9-12900K Desktop Processor 16 (8P+8E)
- Motherboard
- Asus TUF Gaming Z790-PLUS WIFI D4
- Memory
- G.Skill Ripjaws V Series 32gb (2x16gb) DDR4 3200mhz
- Graphics Card(s)
- Asus Dual Geforce Rtx™ 3060 TI Edition 8gb Gddr6
- Monitor(s) Displays
- BenQ EW3270U 31.5” 3840×2160 UHD 16:9 HDR LED 4K LG 27UK850-W 27» 4K UHD IPS LED Monitor with HDR10
- Screen Resolution
- 3840×2160
- Hard Drives
- Samsung 990 with heatsink PRO PCIe 4.0 Gen 4 NVMe® SSD 1TB
WD_BLACK SN850X NVMe M.2 2280 1TB PCI-Express 4.0
Crucial T500 2TB Gen4
Samsung 970 Evo M.2 2280 2tb Pcie Gen3. X4
- PSU
- Corsair AXi Series AX860i Digital 860W 80 PLUS PSU
- Case
- Fractal Meshify C ATX Mid Tower Case
- Keyboard
- Logi MX Keys
- Mouse
- Logi M705
- Internet Speed
- 400 mbs
- Browser
- Firefox
- Antivirus
- Eset NOD32
- Other Info
- Love fast boots
-
-
#17
That would be nice but I doubt TPM 2 will slow down a boot that much if at all. People just look for reasons to complain and now with TPM 2 we have one more.
IMO, Asus makes some of the best parts for PC’s epically motherboards I’m very happy with mine.
You are absolutely correct Jeff.
What can slow a boot down is when more USB hardware is added, or more PCIe hardware.
-
- OS
- Win10 Pro, Win10 Pro N, Win10 Home, Windows 8.1 Pro, Ubuntu
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- ۞ΞЖ†ԘΜΞ۞
- CPU
- Intel Core i9 9900K
- Motherboard
- ASUS ROG Maximus X Hero
- Memory
- 32 GB Quad Kit, G.Skill Trident Z RGB Series schwarz, DDR4-3866, 18-19-19-39-2T
- Graphics Card(s)
- ASUS GeForce RTX 3090 ROG Strix O24G, 24576 MB GDDR6X
- Sound Card
- (1) HD Webcam C270 (2) NVIDIA High Definition Audio (3) Realtek High Definition Audio
- Monitor(s) Displays
- BenQ BL2711U(4K) and a hp 27vx(1080p)
- Hard Drives
- C: Samsung 960 EVO NVMe M.2 SSD
E: & O: Libraries & OneDrive-> Samsung 850 EVO 1TB
D: Hyper-V VM’s -> Samsung PM951 Client M.2 512Gb SSD
G: System Images -> Samsung 860 Pro 2TB
- PSU
- Corsair HX1000i High Performance ATX Power Supply 80+ Platinum
- Case
- Phanteks Enthoo Pro TG
- Cooling
- Thermaltake Floe Riing RGB TT Premium-Edition 360mm and 2×120 Phantek& Halo front, and 1×140 Phanteks
- Keyboard
- Trust GTX THURA
- Mouse
- Trust GTX 148
- Internet Speed
- 25+/5+ (+usually faster)
- Browser
- Edge; Chrome;
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender of course & Malwarebytes Anti-Exploit as an added layer between browser & OS
- Other Info
- Router: FRITZ!Box 7590 AX V2
Sound system: SHARP HT-SBW460 Dolby Atmos Soundbar
Webcam: Logitech BRIO ULTRA HD PRO WEBCAM 4K webcam with HDR
-
-
#18
I have a z590 A, chip or no chip enabled, I don’t have issues, and yes, more toys you add in the slots, the slower the boot. But I can also tell you that if I fiddle around in the bios I can slow the boot down just by enabling or modifying a few settings. I don’t think users complaining are seeing things.
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- CPU
- Intel® Core™ i9-12900K Desktop Processor 16 (8P+8E)
- Motherboard
- Asus TUF Gaming Z790-PLUS WIFI D4
- Memory
- G.Skill Ripjaws V Series 32gb (2x16gb) DDR4 3200mhz
- Graphics Card(s)
- Asus Dual Geforce Rtx™ 3060 TI Edition 8gb Gddr6
- Monitor(s) Displays
- BenQ EW3270U 31.5” 3840×2160 UHD 16:9 HDR LED 4K LG 27UK850-W 27» 4K UHD IPS LED Monitor with HDR10
- Screen Resolution
- 3840×2160
- Hard Drives
- Samsung 990 with heatsink PRO PCIe 4.0 Gen 4 NVMe® SSD 1TB
WD_BLACK SN850X NVMe M.2 2280 1TB PCI-Express 4.0
Crucial T500 2TB Gen4
Samsung 970 Evo M.2 2280 2tb Pcie Gen3. X4
- PSU
- Corsair AXi Series AX860i Digital 860W 80 PLUS PSU
- Case
- Fractal Meshify C ATX Mid Tower Case
- Keyboard
- Logi MX Keys
- Mouse
- Logi M705
- Internet Speed
- 400 mbs
- Browser
- Firefox
- Antivirus
- Eset NOD32
- Other Info
- Love fast boots
-
-
#19
I’ve had TPM turned on since I found out about what it was for since Z170, but I have also use M.2 PCIe boot drives since then, so maybe that’s why I notice no difference.
-
- OS
- Win10 Pro, Win10 Pro N, Win10 Home, Windows 8.1 Pro, Ubuntu
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- ۞ΞЖ†ԘΜΞ۞
- CPU
- Intel Core i9 9900K
- Motherboard
- ASUS ROG Maximus X Hero
- Memory
- 32 GB Quad Kit, G.Skill Trident Z RGB Series schwarz, DDR4-3866, 18-19-19-39-2T
- Graphics Card(s)
- ASUS GeForce RTX 3090 ROG Strix O24G, 24576 MB GDDR6X
- Sound Card
- (1) HD Webcam C270 (2) NVIDIA High Definition Audio (3) Realtek High Definition Audio
- Monitor(s) Displays
- BenQ BL2711U(4K) and a hp 27vx(1080p)
- Hard Drives
- C: Samsung 960 EVO NVMe M.2 SSD
E: & O: Libraries & OneDrive-> Samsung 850 EVO 1TB
D: Hyper-V VM’s -> Samsung PM951 Client M.2 512Gb SSD
G: System Images -> Samsung 860 Pro 2TB
- PSU
- Corsair HX1000i High Performance ATX Power Supply 80+ Platinum
- Case
- Phanteks Enthoo Pro TG
- Cooling
- Thermaltake Floe Riing RGB TT Premium-Edition 360mm and 2×120 Phantek& Halo front, and 1×140 Phanteks
- Keyboard
- Trust GTX THURA
- Mouse
- Trust GTX 148
- Internet Speed
- 25+/5+ (+usually faster)
- Browser
- Edge; Chrome;
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender of course & Malwarebytes Anti-Exploit as an added layer between browser & OS
- Other Info
- Router: FRITZ!Box 7590 AX V2
Sound system: SHARP HT-SBW460 Dolby Atmos Soundbar
Webcam: Logitech BRIO ULTRA HD PRO WEBCAM 4K webcam with HDR
-
-
#20
Most agree with your findings. It’s just that board makers have a bad habit of not detailing updates and you have to read left and right on forums just to get the info which would be a lot simpler if bios updates had at least simple info of what got changed.
It saves time for everyone.
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- CPU
- Intel® Core™ i9-12900K Desktop Processor 16 (8P+8E)
- Motherboard
- Asus TUF Gaming Z790-PLUS WIFI D4
- Memory
- G.Skill Ripjaws V Series 32gb (2x16gb) DDR4 3200mhz
- Graphics Card(s)
- Asus Dual Geforce Rtx™ 3060 TI Edition 8gb Gddr6
- Monitor(s) Displays
- BenQ EW3270U 31.5” 3840×2160 UHD 16:9 HDR LED 4K LG 27UK850-W 27» 4K UHD IPS LED Monitor with HDR10
- Screen Resolution
- 3840×2160
- Hard Drives
- Samsung 990 with heatsink PRO PCIe 4.0 Gen 4 NVMe® SSD 1TB
WD_BLACK SN850X NVMe M.2 2280 1TB PCI-Express 4.0
Crucial T500 2TB Gen4
Samsung 970 Evo M.2 2280 2tb Pcie Gen3. X4
- PSU
- Corsair AXi Series AX860i Digital 860W 80 PLUS PSU
- Case
- Fractal Meshify C ATX Mid Tower Case
- Keyboard
- Logi MX Keys
- Mouse
- Logi M705
- Internet Speed
- 400 mbs
- Browser
- Firefox
- Antivirus
- Eset NOD32
- Other Info
- Love fast boots
-
Home
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News
- Windows 11 Motherboard List – Asus, MSI, Gigabyte, and ASRock
Windows 11 Motherboard List – Asus, MSI, Gigabyte, and ASRock
By Vera | Follow |
Last Updated
Some manufacturers have released some compatible motherboards for Windows 11 and they are Asus, Gigabyte, MSI, and ASRock. Read this post and you can find a Windows 11 motherboard compatibility list. This is helpful to you when upgrading or purchasing a PC.
One of the system requirements of Windows 11 is TPM (Trusted Platform Module) version 2.0. The TPM is a tiny chip on a computer’s motherboard to provide hardware-based and security-related functions. To run Windows 11 on your PC properly, you should have a compatible motherboard.
To satisfy needs, many motherboard makers make a response and have released some motherboards that are compatible with Windows 11. MSI, Asus, ASRock, and Gigabyte first roll out Windows 11 motherboards and let’s see a list.
Windows 11 Motherboard Compatibility List
MSI Motherboard Windows 11
As a leader of the motherboard brand, MSI is designed to offer the most pleasant experience to gamers when using the motherboard. It gives a full and clear list of Intel and AMD motherboards that can work with Windows 11 very well.
The following are the MSI TPM 2.0 ready motherboards
Intel
Series | Chipset |
500 series | Z590 / B560 / H510 |
400 series | Z490 / B460 / H410 |
300 series | Z390 / Z370 / H370 / B360 / B365 / H310 |
200 series | Z270 / H270 / B250 |
100 series | Z170 / H170 / B150 / H110 |
X299 series | X299 |
AMD
Series | Chipset |
500 series | X570S / X570 / B550 / A520 |
400 series | X470 / B450 |
300 series | X370 / B350 / A320 |
TRX40 series | |
X399 series |
Asus Windows 11 Motherboard
What are Windows 11 motherboards that Asus supports? See a full list of compatible motherboards.
Intel
- C621, C422, C246 series
- X299 series
- Z590, Q570, H570, B560, H510 series
- Z490, Q470, H470, B460, H410, W480 series
- Z390, Z370, H370, B365, B360, H310, Q370 series
AMD
WRX80, TRX40, X570, B550, A520, X470, B450, X370, B350 and A320 series
To learn the specific models of motherboards, refer to this post about Asus Motherboards Ready for Windows 11.
Gigabyte Windows 11 Motherboard
In a press post, Gigabytes has announced the supported Windows 11 motherboards that feature TPM 2.0 functionality. And they are:
- Intel X299, C621, C232, C236, C246, 200, 300, 400, and 500 series
- AMD TRX40, 300, 400, 500 series
ASRock Windows 11 Motherboards
ASRock revealed both Intel and AMD motherboards support list for Windows 11 on July 5, 2021.
Intel Windows 11 Motherboard
Series | Supported Chipset |
300 Series | Z390, Z370, H370, B360, B365, H310, H310C |
400 Series | Z490, H470, B460, H410 |
500 Series | Z590, B560, H510, H570 |
X299 Series | X299 |
AMD Windows 11 Motherboard
Series | Supported Chipset |
300 Series | X399, X370, B350, A320, A300, X300 |
400 Series | X470, B450 |
500 Series | X570, B550, A520 |
TRX40 Series | XTRX40299 |
Of course, these are the currently supported Windows 11 motherboards from Asus, Gigabyte, MSI, and ASRock. In the future, there will be some other motherboard models (from other manufacturers) that are compatible with Windows 11.
Tip: Check TPM and Enable It in BIOS
TPM is important for you to run Windows 11. Well then, does your PC have TPM? You need to perform a TPM check. This is an easy task and you can follow this post – How to Check if Your PC Has TPM for Windows 11. Besides, you should make sure TPM is enabled on your PC. Also, the given post shows you how to enable TPM.
About The Author
Position: Columnist
Vera is an editor of the MiniTool Team since 2016 who has more than 7 years’ writing experiences in the field of technical articles. Her articles mainly focus on disk & partition management, PC data recovery, video conversion, as well as PC backup & restore, helping users to solve some errors and issues when using their computers. In her spare times, she likes shopping, playing games and reading some articles.