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ASRock Z390 Phantom Gaming 9 Motherboard Review

ASRock has a “Phantom Gaming” utility for the 2.5 Gigabit LAN connection. It's not that different to rival software products (ASUS GameFirst IV, MSI Gaming LAN manager) and offers a way to do packet prioritisation, traffic shaping and monitor network statistics.

The value of the 2.5 Gigabit LAN connection appears somewhat limited at this stage as there are few devices around that support the throughput of this standard. However, there would be a speed benefit to this device sitting on a network that is operating at 2.5, 5 or 10 Gigabit.

ASRock’s App Shop provides the dual role of serving out ASRock’s own software and approved third party software (some of dubious value), but also includes a MSI Live Update-style function which scans for certain BIOS and driver versions and informs the user when a newer version is available.

It’s reasonably useful for both of its provided functions and isn’t too intrusive, but does pop up the occasional notification in Windows 10.

ASRock Polychrome RGB seems to be a rebranding of the previous ASRock AURA RGB, perhaps due to naming similarities with the ASUS AURA RGB solution. The new software is a little bit slicker with handy visualisations of each of the available zones that can be altered – on this board there are three RGB headers and three onboard RGB lighting zones.

The way the colours and modes are changed is the same as predecessor software. It works by selecting the colour on the outer ring first, then the inner square after and then you can pick the style from the drop down menu, there are currently 7 modes as shown above. It's also possible to select the colour using the RGB sliders.

At some point in the future we expect ASRock may integrate RGB into its graphics card though at the moment there are still a range of other computer hardware products that are compatible with ASRock’s Polychrome RGB Sync, as listed on ASRock’s microsite.

Restart to UEFI does exactly what it says on the tin and is handy if you’re not quite quick enough on the F2 or Delete keys.

ASRock Phantom Gaming Tuning, the Phantom Gaming-branded equivalent of A-Tuning, is ASRock’s equivalent to ASUS AI Suite, Gigabyte EasyTune and MSI Command Centre. This software allows you to set power profiles, overclock on the fly (OTF) and tune the fan speeds with the ASRock Fan-Tastic tuning. It’s a reasonably well polished piece of software, is light on system resources and not very intrusive.

In our experience the fan tuning is still better off carried out within the UEFI environment, the same applies for OTF overclocking, but there’s no harm in ASRock offering the software equivalent for those that prefer.

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