I have been building PCs since the early 2000 so I am very well aware of how that works. My main point was how audio has improved a ton from when I first started building the the inclusion of DACS in more recent revisions. My last PC build was a Z390 intel. I spent $269 on a midrange Gigabyte Master Mobo.
As far as my motherboard choice there were a range of criteria, not just to shell out $$$ for a cool looking board. Anyone looking to faster FPS on games by spending 699 vs 249 for a board would be crazy. I don't think I have ever sold a used MoBo, but it surprising that some actually go up in value. X99 Mobos still command premium dollars.
My Criteria (Both Gaming and Content Creation)
- I wanted the faster USB Type C ports (20MB/s vs 10)
- More inputs, more fan headers, better power design as I like to tinker around for overclocking.
- I like the fact it had an add on card for another 2 M.2 Drives
- Clear CMOS button, Flash Bios buttons on the back panel
- 10GB Lan for Future Storage Solution
- Cooling Solution the new AMDs run really hot 95 Degree C
- Who makes the audio/networking chipsets as some have much better drivers than others
I agree that I am free to buy whatever I want, and I do, but not because I want to buy an expensive board because its "cool" LOL.
If I were just a basic gamer, I would get a basic motherboard, I do content creation with my drone videos, concerts etc and I will also use for work.
MY ORIGINAL COMMENT: Even entry point for AM5 is around 250-300, midpoint is 499-699 and then there are the "God LIkes" and Asus motherboard that would are the 1k and over all the bells, lights and whistles. This has gone up significantly for this generation vs the Z690, Z590s and x570s when they launched by a large margin.
If I were just a gamer, I would get the 58003D CPU or even 12700K/12600K and stick with DDR4 and call it day, there is not enough reason to justify buying the new AMD or Intel launching in October purely for gaming, and put the majority of your budget to a video card.