A:AnswerHi nickname,
There are too many opinions of what would be considered "good" to give you any one answer. The best answer will depend on what you want to use this computer for. You may need a motherboard with many PCI-E slots, for rendering many video display outputs, or you may want an extreme performance motherboard with an expanded VRM for overclocking the CPU under exotic cooling. The best motherboard is the one that performs the functions you need it to perform, and no more than that to add to the expense of it. If you are looking at this processor as the heart of the system, and you want normal performance under normal configuration, I would suggest looking at the x550 chipset motherboards. Many good options exist in the 150-200 price range, and reading an article or watching a YouTube video from competent reviewers on the board you are considering, can help you understand if the board would be a good fit for your system and your needs.
A:AnswerYes. But with possiblly a hitch, the B450M-A supports the Ryzen 5 5600X after a certain bios version, considering that 5600X has November 2020 release date, unless your board has been on the shelf since before or right after that time (which is possible but unlikely) then it will likely already have a BIOS version installed that will support the processor. Manufacturers don't continue to ship mobos with day 1 bios versions after the release of noteworthy processors that need updates for compatibility. It's bad practi
A:AnswerNice flex, but no one cares lol you realize you're asking about a CPU, right? In all of that list, the only component you needed to mention is nowhere to be found.
A:AnswerASUS TUFF or ASUS ROG. Have bought both and both for gaming use and paired them both with Ryzen 5 Processors, 16 gigs Corssair memory, and Nvidia Gforce 1050TI an 1660TI vidio cards. They both rock with NO lag.