I'm not sure if you mean this specific case, or every OEM case and OEM motherboard in general. I'm not familiar with the PC in question in this thread, so hopefully it has standard connectors.
However I was helping someone with a brand new Acer Desktop PC recently (decent specs as well, z370 Chipset, standard ATX form factor, i7 8700K and a RTX2070), and he wanted to switch to a different case than the Acer one, but keep the hardware - this proved impossible as all connections for the switches and HDD LED and PWR LED were unlike anything that would be considered standard, thus the motherboard did not connect to a differnt case. They were integrated into one, and the header was similar the connectors used on some modern graphics card coolers (usually RGB ones) to connect the cooler to the GPU PCB (I believe they are 12 or 14-pin, but I don't recall specifically).
Some front panel connectors on pre-builts look the same, but the pin layout may be different. This is a problem for instance, if the case has one plug that combines all the connections to the front panel, and the pin layout of the new motherboard doesn't match. Then you'll have to cut wires and rearrange them.
Sometimes you can attach some of the front panel connectors and leave the rest of them disconnected to make it work, other times, like the Acer I mentioned, the connector is of a completely different type.
I still have the Acer case sitting in my basement, as the person wound up ordering both a new motherboard and case. So I can esaily provide pictures.
Some Dell computers, for example, use 5-pin headers for the fans, it is easily fixed by using a specific adaptor. But the layout of the pins and socket are fashioned in a way so they don't physically fit a 3 or 4-pin fan.
All connectors are certainly not standard on all OEM Pre-built PC brands like Acer, HP, Dell etc., if that's what you meant. If you meant they are standard on this particular case, that's great for the OP
Note that I'm specifically erferring to pre-builts by the likes of Acer, Dell, HP and so on. I'm not referring to parts you buy seperately (non-OEM), or pre-builts by different computer component stores.
I hope the OP is able to switch everyhing over, with no problems, I just felt it was worth checking beforehand. But everyone are free to ignore my suggestion.