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Realist Posted
When I first heard about the new hidden-connector motherboard designs taking over the market, I knew I wanted to build with one. The Gigabyte X870 Aorus Stealth ICE is honestly one of the nicest hidden-connector boards I have used so far. It looks super clean, has a really strong feature set, feels premium in the hand, and just makes the whole build come together in a way a normal board usually does not. Design and Aesthetics The first thing you notice with this board is the look. The all-white color scheme, the white connectors, and the chunky heatsinks all work together really well. If you are going for a clean showcase build, this thing absolutely nails that style. And obviously, the big selling point is the rear-connector layout. Once everything is built, the front side just looks way cleaner than a traditional motherboard setup. You do still need a case that supports it, and you need to put a little effort into cable management on the back side, but when it all comes together, it looks incredibly clean. Main Features As far as features go, this board is stacked. You are getting USB4, Wi-Fi 7, PCIe 5.0 for the graphics card, PCIe 5.0 storage, DDR5 support, and multiple fast M.2 slots. So from a spec standpoint, it definitely feels like a proper high-end AM5 board and not just something that looks good in pictures. The VRM setup is also really solid with a 16+2+2 twin digital design, which means it has no problem handling higher-end Ryzen CPUs. Pair that with the large heatsinks and the board just feels like it is built for a serious system. What I also like is that the board is not just about the headline specs. You get four M.2 slots, dual USB4, 5GbE, and the EZ-Latch stuff that makes building a little less annoying. It has a lot of small quality-of-life features that you definitely appreciate once you start putting the system together. Build Quality Build quality is one of the areas where this board really stands out. The metal backplate, the large heatsinks, and the debug display all make it feel like a genuinely premium piece of hardware. Even just handling it during the build, it feels sturdy and well thought out instead of flashy but cheap. Software On the software side, you are dealing with Gigabyte Control Center. The good news is that it looks pretty clean and it picked up my RGB right away, which is always nice because that is not something you can take for granted with motherboard software. The downside is that monitoring still feels a little clunky since some of the info is buried in separate sections instead of being right in front of you. It is usable, but there is definitely room for improvement. Wi-Fi Wi-Fi was actually one of the more interesting parts of the experience. The board uses a Qualcomm Wi-Fi 7 module with support for 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 6 GHz, plus Bluetooth 5.4, so on paper it is a really strong setup. The only weird part for me was that some of the more advanced stuff, like MLO, was not super obvious in the settings or software. That said, Wi-Fi 7 only really matters if the rest of your network can take advantage of it, so your router setup is a big part of the story here. I do like that the wireless card is an M.2 module, though, because it means you still have the option to swap it later if you ever want to. Final Conclusion So overall, I have been really impressed with the Gigabyte X870 Aorus Stealth ICE. It gives you that super clean hidden-connector look, but it also backs it up with the kind of features and build quality you would expect from a high-end board. For me, the biggest wins are the design, the overall build quality, the USB4 support, and just how polished the whole thing feels once the system is done. It is the kind of board that makes a lot of sense if you care about performance, but also care a lot about how your build actually looks. My biggest complaint is still the lane-sharing situation. If you run two PCIe 5.0 M.2 drives, you lose USB4, so if keeping USB4 matters to you, it makes more sense to drop one of those drives into a PCIe 4.0 slot instead. Pros • Super clean hidden-connector layout that makes the finished build look awesome • Very solid build quality with a metal backplate and a lot of heatsink coverage • Strong modern feature set with USB4, Wi-Fi 7, 5GbE, and PCIe 5.0 • Nice DIY-friendly features that make the build process easier Cons • Lane sharing can take away USB4 if you install two PCIe 5.0 M.2 drives • Some advanced Wi-Fi features are not very clear in the software • Gigabyte Control Center still needs a better system monitoring layout • You need the right case to really get the most out of the rear-connector design At the end of the day, this is a really easy board to like if you want a clean AM5 build and still want all the premium stuff. The attached images show how clean the final setup looks, with very few visible cables.