ASRock X79 Fatal1ty Software

The big feature ASRock always wants to promote is its XFast platform – XFast USB, XFast LAN and XFast RAM.  This trio of features have been a constant addition to any ASRock motherboard over the past twelve months, and promise up to 5x performance in each of the areas (although benchmarks are cherry picked to get that 5x speedup).  When XFast meets Fatal1ty, part of me secretly hoped for “XFatal1ty” software to integrate all the features.  No such luck, though the regular software platform does get a new red and black skin along with an extra Fatal1ty specific feature.

The Driver CD gets the Fatal1ty treatment – when selecting which drivers and software to install, Wendel’s face greets you on every screen.  Thankfully choosing which drivers and software to install is a quick affair and the process completes automatically, leaving the user to go off make a hot drink rather than make eye contact.

The main hub of the software platform comes from the ASRock eXtreme Tuning Utility, which for the purposes of the Fatal1ty motherboards is called F-Stream Tuning, but it is essentially the same program with a red and black skin.

F-Stream Tuning

Much like its parent AXTU, F-ST features several menus including a hardware monitor, fan control, an overclocking menu, an energy saving menu and the XFast RAM selections.  The Fatal1ty exclusive component is in the Fatal1ty Mouse Port option:

If a user has a USB mouse capable of being polled at more than 125 Hz, then this software enables that setting through a specific motherboard port designed to be polled at the higher frequencies.  The benefits of having a mouse that can be polled 1000 Hz is debatable at best, depending on the frame rate and responsiveness of the game in question (e.g. at V-Sync, the mouse input is processed as if it were at 60 Hz), but it is there if needed.

On the fan control side of the software, our basic ASRock controls are still at play – the CPU fans and first chassis fan are offered target temperatures and fan target speeds, with all other fan headers having fan target speeds.  It is a little uncertain what the ‘target speed’ actually does due to the lack of explanation – does it define the fan speed after the target temperature, or will the fan be at 100% above the target temperature such that the target speed defines the fan profile below the target temperature?  Or is it just a single fan speed above/below the target temperature?  Fan controls this basic are practically pointless, especially when the motherboard has access to the fan RPM, temperature sensors and power output to all the fan headers.  With some clever software manipulation, it would be easy to create an all-singing, all-dancing fan software application.  No such luck with the ASRock X79 Fatal1ty boards.

Overclock settings via F-Stream are also a little odd like the fan controls.  The software behind the overclock settings was developed before turbo boost became a regular CPU feature and idle CPU states came into play.  This means that this part of the software will always take the current CPU speed and voltage settings as the common settings, even if the system is idling.  As shown in the picture below, it thinks we are at 1200 MHz all the time.  CPU voltages are only changeable in terms of offset, and there is no indication as to what the current voltages, speeds or temperatures are.  Time for an upgrade, ASRock!

XFast RAM is actually a smart feature I like on these ASRock boards.  It allows users with a lot of memory to partition some of it away as a fast (5+ GBps read/write) storage device and quick cache, meaning all those temporary files created by various actions are put somewhere quick to be accessed again.  ASRock offers the ability to enable Ready Boost through this feature, as well as change settings to adjust system and IE temporary files.  For any system with 16GB+ of memory, it might be worth partitioning 4 GB into something like this.

XFast USB

We have played with XFast USB for many months now, and the premise is simple – the basic Windows 7 USB drivers were written many years ago, and now we have the option to speed up those protocols.  XFast USB, when enabled and a USB storage device is inserted, implements its driver to take advantage of Bulk Only Transfer (BOT) commands.  This technically speeds up mass transfer across the USB interface (USB 2.0 and USB 3.0) at the expense of individual file latency.  In our testing it makes a significant improvement on USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 in Windows 7, although it is worth mentioning that some other manufacturers also have their own implementations of something similar to XFast USB.

XFast LAN

XFast LAN (aka cFosSpeed) is an advanced network port manipulation tool, designed for monitoring, prioritizing and adjusting network traffic all via software.  For anyone other than ASRock, this is a 9.90 Euro purchase, but ASRock has a bulk licensing deal for every one of their motherboards, and helps users to adjust certain programs for priority data travel over any network interface on the motherboard.

Marvell Storage

As the ASRock X79 Fatal1ty motherboards both use Marvell controllers to increase the SATA 6 Gbps port count, included in the package is the Marvell Storage Management panel.  Accessed via the web interface, the software allows the user to manage the RAID setup across the ports, AES and HyperDuo (the Marvell version of SSD Caching).

ASRock X79 Fatal1ty BIOS ASRock X79 Champion In The Box, Overclocking
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  • scaramoosh - Saturday, February 9, 2013 - link

    I don't get why they release these, he's done nothing in half a decade and no self respecting person who knows anything about hardware would buy because of a so called Celeb name being put on it. It just acts as a warning sign for me...
  • Tech-Curious - Saturday, February 9, 2013 - link

    I admit that I didn't really know who Fatal1ty was before I read this article, apart from a vague recognition that the silly leet-speak moniker belonged to someone in gaming.

    And I agree with your general point, that such branding on a motherboard is silly.

    But all of that said, if the guy really did win $500,000 in gaming competitions, that's a pretty big deal. Now that he's retired, if companies (or, perhaps, their customers) are dumb enough to give him a comfortable living through lame marketing campaigns like ASRock's, then more power to him.

    Wouldn't touch the motherboard with a ten foot pole, but I can't blame the endorser for accepting the check.

    Nice review.
  • Beenthere - Saturday, February 9, 2013 - link

    The "Fatality" branded mobos are just Asrocks high end models. They are pretty good mobos.

    The issue is the marketing is dumb as are those who buy products based on this type of marketing. Clearly enough Asrock customers voiced their displeasure with the crap marketing of John Boy all over the place as Asrock removed his image from the BIOS and allows people to disable his face on the boot screen too. Owner reviews in any PC hardware forum show a lot of folks unhappy with the marketing - not the mobos.
  • Samus - Saturday, February 9, 2013 - link

    I've owned a few Fatal1ty products and all of them have been really good quality, especially the headsets and mice.

    I don't think the guy will put his name on crap. And I don't think companies making crap want his name on their product, since it isn't cheap to put his name on that product and if it backfires, it'll cost them.
  • Omega215D - Sunday, February 10, 2013 - link

    The Creative gaming mice with his name on it weren't all that great performance-wise and were pretty much crap compared to stuff from Logitech in those days. The sound cards weren't anything special as well but cost much more than it should.
  • hp79 - Sunday, February 10, 2013 - link

    I had a crap fatality branded geforce 8800gs or something, and it was uber crap. I got this as a repalcement when my 7900gs died. My 8800gs had no fan control, so it was running at 100% all the time. Very loud graphics card. I sold it after couple days.

    I really don't see a point branding it with a person maybe because I don't even know or care who this dude is.
  • StevoLincolnite - Sunday, February 10, 2013 - link

    I had a Fatal1ty 990FX board in my old AMD rig, was incredibly solid and overclocked like a champ.

    Unfortunately, I needed more performance and decided to go with a Military themed build so went with the Asus Sabertooth X79 board, which other than slightly noisy motherboard fans is solid too.
  • aguilpa1 - Tuesday, February 12, 2013 - link

    Yea, I still have a Fatal1ty Xfi audio card but I didn't buy because it had his handle on it but because at the time it was the only Xfi model that offered the break out box front panel.
  • JonnyDough - Friday, February 15, 2013 - link

    It tells us that it's a high-end board though. Just as it did for Creative and whoever else. It's like putting Ferrari on a monitor....LOL
  • Flunk - Saturday, February 9, 2013 - link

    I agree. I refuse to buy anything branded with that name on principle. I'm not paying extra just for branding from someone I don't even respect or care about. Hell, I would rather have a Michael Jordan* branded motherboard than a one of these.

    *No, I do not like Basketball.

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