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ASUS TUF GAMING B650M-PLUS WIFI Socket AM5 (LGA 1718) Ryzen 7000 mATX gaming motherboard(14 power stages, PCIe® 5.0 M.2 support, DDR5 memory, 2.5 Gb Ethernet, WiFi 6, USB4® support and Aura Sync)

  • Based on 1,378 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Tuesday, Jun 4
Order within 14 hours and 38 minutes
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Style: ‎TUF GAMING B650M-PLUS WIFI


Features

  • AMD AM5 socket: Ready for AMD Ryzen 7000 Series desktop processors
  • Enhanced power solution: 12+2 teamed power stages, 8+4 ProCool sockets, alloy chokes and durable capacitors for stable power delivery
  • Next-gen connectivity: M.2 PCIe 5.0, USB 3.2 Gen2x2 Type-C, front USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-C, USB4 support
  • Made for online Gaming: Realtek 2.5 Gb Ethernet and TUF LANGuard
  • Two-way AI Noise Cancelation: Reduces background noise from the microphone and audio output for crystal-clear communication in games or video conferences
  • Comprehensive cooling: Enlarged VRM and PCH heatsinks, M.2 heatsinks, hybrid fan headers and Fan Xpert 2+ utility in Armoury Crate
  • Aura Sync RGB effects: Stylish edge lighting design, addressable RGB headers and RGB strip header

Brand: ASUS


CPU Socket: Socket AM5


Compatible Devices: Personal Computer


RAM Memory Technology: DDR5


Compatible Processors: amd athlon


Chipset Type: AMD B650


Memory Clock Speed: 6400 MHz


Platform: Windows 10


Model Name: TUF GAMING B650M-PLUS WIFI


Memory Storage Capacity: 128 GB


Product Dimensions: 10.83 x 2.65 x 10.83 inches


Item Weight: 3.34 pounds


Item model number: TUF GAMING B650M-PLUS WIFI


Date First Available: October 12, 2022


Manufacturer: ASUS


Country of Origin: China


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Tuesday, Jun 4

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Looks nice, was really hoping for better.
Style: ‎TUF GAMING B650M-PLUS WIFI
First thing's first, I've only had this motherboard for 3 days, and actually set up the system yesterday. This is a very short term ownership review but some things need to be said for anyone else looking for Ryzen 7000 motherboards. I picked this board looking at the brand(ASUS), product line(TUF), features offered vs features I needed, and the aesthetic. I like ASUS products, I've owned many over the years. I like the new aesthetic (black, gray, & yellows) offered by the TUF line and once upon a time ago when the TUF series was ugly I had an ASUS TUF Sabertooth motherboard that was an absolute monster of a unit. I was happy to give this motherboard a shot. Physical installation was typical and I find it easy enough, once you've built one computer it's only as difficult as the case you choose to put it into makes it unless you're doing custom water cooling loops, that's a whole different beast. I paired the board with a Ryzen 7600 (non-x) which was only released 7 days before I bought and installed it. I'm willing to give this fact as a real possible factor into woes to follow. Although the architecture is basically identical so I don't know how much I should allow this to play in ASUS' favor. Once I had the system built and was ready to power it on, things started going sideways. The initial POST honestly seemed like it locked up or failed with no display as it just sat there with the DRAM led lit up. After waiting for about 5 minutes for it to do anything I started flipping though the motherboard manual to see if there was any special meaning to the DRAM led other than bad memory. The section in the manual for POST codes might as well be non existent as each part just lists the LED as it's labeled on the board CPU, DRAM, VGA and says that if the light stays illuminated it might be the problem. There is no advanced diagnostics whatsoever. While I'm flipping through the manual however, and we're probably at about 8-9 minutes after I powered on the system the display finally lit up... Nearly 10 full minutes to POST for the first time isn't a great start. I was finally in the BIOS and as is typical with ASUS, it's nicely laid out and pretty easy to use. My last system had an MSI motherboard and this wasn't my experience with them. Great, progress. Longer story made shorter, for whatever reason ANY changes made to the BIOS on this board results in the following reboot having a 2-4 minute long POST. Every single time. No matter how small the adjustment, such as turning off the motherboard's setting to try and automatically download/install the Armoury Crate software any time you're connected to the internet... Or adjusting the fan speeds/curves through the BIOS. I couldn't get the XMP or as it's called in this board's BIOS DOCP for my memory to work, each time I tried enabling it I'd get stuck with a 5 minute POST that fails, then the system would reboot itself, another 2-4 minute POST where it would finally take me to a "previous POST failed" and get back into the BIOS to disable it. With how long these POSTs take, I simply don't have the patience to even attempt manually overclocking anything. Moving on, once I had the BIOS set up the way I wanted it, which was literally just adjusting the fan curves and turning off the automatic Armoury Crate install, which took over an hour between attempts to get the DOCP for the memory working and having to load optimized defaults a few times after that failed. I installed windows, which worked perfectly. When rebooting the system will POST in like 3-4 seconds as long as no additional changes have been made, so as long as you're ok with that most of the nightmare is over. The next grievance to rear it's ugly head was the wifi card that's installed in these boards. Possibly built right in to the board, if not it's not in an easily swappable location. It's a MediaTek MT7921, and it's hot garbage. It's reliability is unstable at best, and it gets half the speed an Intel AX210 does. Using the MediaTek MT7921 I was getting between 30-50 Mb/s download speeds with very high idle and download latencies as measured through speedtest. My ISP plan is for 300 Mb/s down 20 Mb/s up. And the latency was unbearable, loading a page was several seconds of waiting followed by some of the page popping in quickly then more waiting, assuming it didn't drop connection altogether partway through. I did some reading and this is a common issue across many ASUS products(mainly laptops), and for some bizarre reason it's still ASUS' go to wifi chipset. But a possible fix was found in manually changing it from 802.11ax mode to 802.11ac mode, which honestly helped a lot. My download speed jumped up into the 130-160 Mb/s range and it was much more stable, but there was still abnormally high latency causing pages to load slowly initially, then quickly enough after a few moments. But this latency was still unbearable with any kind of streaming, you'd get maybe 5 seconds of a youtube video to load then 5 seconds of buffering. I cannot stress enough how unbelievably bad this MediaTek wifi card is, I didn't think this would be such an issue or I probably would have bought a different board. And it's likely not "defective" as there's so many threads about this exact wifi adapter being a piece of junk, it's just hard to imagine why ASUS would continue to use it. I purchased a PCIE wifi card (Aorus GC-WBAX210) which I had to move my GPU to the bottom slot to be able to install as my RX 7900 XTX blocked the 1x slot below it as well as the bottom 16x slot. But my case had enough room to move the gpu to the bottom slot which is still rated for the same speed as the top slot, not an issue. After installing the Aorus wifi adapter which has an Intel AX210 card, my wifi connection is stable, and I get the full speed my ISP offers. 352 Mb/s down, 24 Mb/s up. I could have bought a cheaper wifi adapter that still had the intel AX210 however I liked the Aorus' chonky external antenna with magnetic base. Adapters with the intel AX210 are easily found here on Amazon for about $28 USD, the Aorus I chose was $50 USD. A final mention would be that the ASUS/TUF Armoury Crate software, which is the software used to make changes to the BIOS settings(like fan speed) and monitor hardware temps and whatnot is janky garbage as well, would not recommend using it, which is why I would tolerate the long POST time to disable the auto install setting built into the BIOS. If you do have a system that uses it, and want to get rid of it you have to specifically download the Armoury Crate uninstaller from the product page of your ASUS product, it's listed in the drivers/bios page under the Armoury Crate installer(hidden by a dropdown labeled show more). Once you get passed the BIOS setup, which if you intend to do any kind of overclocking you should look elsewhere or have the patience of a saint. If you're not using wifi, or brought your own wifi solution, then this is a perfectly functional, nice looking motherboard. But due to the aforementioned issues, I would not recommend this product for anyone other than somebody who absolutely has to have a specific aesthetic. Honestly look elsewhere, and if if it's not already there, add "does not have MediaTek wifi adapter" to your list of needs for your system build requirements. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2023 by Corey Collins

  • Well-built, good quality, works as intended.
Style: ‎TUF GAMING B650M-PLUS WIFI
This motherboard works amazingly well for my Ryzen 7 7800x3d. Out of the box, I didn't have to change anything besides updating the BIOS which was two versions out of date. It was, however, updated to the one which limits SOC voltage, so I was not worried about ruining my CPU. The BIOS options are great and it includes everything you could need to overclock. I would suggest using EXPO II for your RAM though as sometimes the EXPO I ASUS optimized timings can be unstable. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2023 by Kenneth Stanley Clark

  • Best mATX board? Perhaps.
Style: TUF GAMING B550M-PLUS (WI-FI)
I’ve been really wanting to get a ryzen computer for at least the last couple of years, I just been waiting for the right opportunity, I ended up jumping early during during April 2021 during the worst time to buy PC hardware. I overspent on a ryzen 5 3600 but I paid 150 for this motherboard. And I’m calling that a win because a year ago to find an MATX motherboard with all the features, you were getting an X570 and spending over 220$ I’m running a thermaltake S100 all white case and decided to go with a white theme and no RGB. And then I discovered this motherboard has RGB, on the right side where the yellow and black warning tape looking thing is, there is a RGB under there, but under the bios I have it disabled. I may put RGB in here later, but right now I’m happy with it. The WiFi is awesome. I live in a two story house running a netgear R6700v2 and on 5ghz AC channel I get the full 115mbps spectrum connection despite being so far away. The 2.5G Ethernet port is really cool, I don’t have that capability yet but it’s nice to have it. It’s got Several RGB fan headers including an aura sync RGB header. So it’s good for your RGB needs. 4 memory dim slots for a micro atx board yes! Some motherboards only have 2. 2 m.2 expansion slots. I installed an SK Hynix S31 gold NVMe drive under the heat sink slot under the GPU. Be sure to follow the instructions on how to install it. The drive is super fast and responsive and the system is handling it great. Speaking of instructions. The instruction manual is a lot less to be desired. ASUS just assumes you know computers and will figure it out on your own. Case in point, I’m used to motherboards that either have an obvious color system or number system for dual channel memory modes. Although this one is color coded it didn’t make sense as to which one to install and the manual didn’t make sense either. I had to scour the internet and look for pictures of people who had this and see how they had theirs installed to know where to put the memory lol. This is not my first computer build FYI. I haven’t done much tweaking of the ryzen CPU. All I did was turn on DOCP (XMP) and that was basically it. Of course changing boot orders because I transferred from my old computer. There is one little thing this motherboard does and I don’t know why. When the computer is off, if I nudge or move my Logitech g203 mouse the RGB turns on inside the mouse but the computer is off. So I have to turn the computer on and then turn it off to make the mouse turn off, I don’t know if that’s because I’m hooked up to a UPS or there is some USB wake setting on the bios. I tried looking for one of those and couldn’t find that setting. All in all I’m very happy with this board. ASUS hit it out of the park with this. I think B550 is the way to go if you don’t want to spend 200+ And if your looking for a micro atx form factor this is perfect. My case only fits micro atx and not the standard atx. I like the fact that the spacing of the pci express and mini pci express isn’t gonna be blocked. The nvme drive is under the GPU so that’s no big deal, instead of many motherboards, a precious pci express slot is covered by the GPU. Especially with an mATX board where you don’t have as much space to work with unlike a full atx board. I don’t know what else to say. It just works. I am not over clocking and I never will. I want stability and it has it in spades. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2021 by M. Phelps M. Phelps

  • 3 Gen Ryzen does work
Style: TUF Gaming B550M-PLUS WIFI II
As the title says, 3rd Gen Ryzen does work but not all features will work. The motherboard works well for what I need but I can not run it to its full potential because of the CPU. I have a 3400g Ryzen but the on board graphics will not work on this motherboard. I knew this from the start and will be upgrading the cpu soon. Some other OC features aren't going to work because of the CPU limitations. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2023 by That guy

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