[SOLVED] What's so tough about "TUF Gaming" Motherboards?

RonKorakas

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Aug 20, 2020
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I bought a "TUF Gaming" B550 Motherboard. But I don't understand what's so tough about them. It doesn't feel much more durable than any other motherboard I've held. There's nothing special I see about it. It's not like the difference between one of those cell phones with the super rugged, indestructible case. It looks like literally every other motherboard I've ever bought. In fact, the plastic piece where you plug the USB 3 cable came off. Fortunately, it came directly up, in a vertical motion, and it didn't bend any pins.
But that leaves me confused as to why they're marketed as "TUF Gaming".
Is it just dumb marketing naming gimmicks?
 
Solution
..it just doesn't look or feel any higher quality than any other board I've bought in the last couple of years....
You can't really determine quality of a motherboard by such nebulous characteristics as 'look' or 'feel'. Instead look at the components used, the brand names, tolerances and operating temperature ratings among others.
TUF actually stands for The Ultimate Force , it doesn't actually mean the gear is able to take knocks.

Does your board have the thermal armour? thats one difference you don't get on their other boards.
https://www.asus.com/microsite/mb/tuf/why-tuf.htm

I don't know where marketing ends and reality begins though.
 
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I bought a "TUF Gaming" B550 Motherboard. But I don't understand what's so tough about them. It doesn't feel much more durable than any other motherboard I've held. There's nothing special I see about it. It's not like the difference between one of those cell phones with the super rugged, indestructible case. It looks like literally every other motherboard I've ever bought. In fact, the plastic piece where you plug the USB 3 cable came off. Fortunately, it came directly up, in a vertical motion, and it didn't bend any pins.
But that leaves me confused as to why they're marketed as "TUF Gaming".
Is it just dumb marketing naming gimmicks?

I believe the model line was started back in the days when cheap Chinese-made capacitors would pop on motherboards with very high frequency...many times after only a few dozens of hours of operation. The entire line used high quality Japanese capacitors and the name TUF was used to give the line a cachet of ruggedness and help justify the extra cost from using decent quality components.

Now, it's just marketing. They probably use Chinese caps (like everyone else), but at least they've improved enough to last for a few thousand hours. Or at least long enough most users lose interest in the performance and upgrade. If you want a board with true 'ruggedness' and high(er) quality components you need to look for a commercial motherboard. They'll probably be boring green color, no RGB bling and no overclocking features. But they'll last a long time even covered in dust.
 
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TUF actually stands for The Ultimate Force , it doesn't actually mean the gear is able to take knocks.

Does your board have the thermal armour? thats one difference you don't get on their other boards.
https://www.asus.com/microsite/mb/tuf/why-tuf.htm

I don't know where marketing ends and reality begins though.

I wouldn't say you're wrong, but they definitely chose the Acronym and name for this specific reason: "ASUS TUF motherboards are built to last ..."

That's their marketing push.

My specific board does not hat the thermal armor. There's a couple of components that have a thermal covering, like m.2 slot, But it doesn't have the rest of the covers.

I don't know, it just looks and feels virtually the same as the last board I bought which was a normal, boring B450. And I didn't ready anything on the TUF website, that made the board any more special than the rest.
 
I believe the model line was started back in the days when cheap Chinese-made capacitors would pop on motherboards with very high frequency...many times after only a few dozens of hours of operation. The entire line used high quality Japanese capacitors and the name TUF was used to give the line a cachet of ruggedness and help justify the extra cost from using decent quality components.

Now, it's just marketing. They probably use Chinese caps (like everyone else), but at least they've improved enough to last for a few thousand hours. Or at least long enough most users lose interest in the performance and upgrade. If you want a board with true 'ruggedness' and high(er) quality components you need to look for a commercial motherboard. They'll probably be boring green color, no RGB bling and no overclocking features. But they'll last a long time even covered in dust.

As I said to the other poster, it just doesn't look or feel any higher quality than any other board I've bought in the last couple of years. So, if there's a video or something showing comparisons of their durability, then maybe I could believe their claims of "our boards are made to last".