Priced at $329.99, the Z690I Aorus Ultra Plus is well-priced and generally well equipped for a Mini-ITX board. It looks good, has integrated RGB, and is arguably the best option in the Z690 Mini-ITX space. But if you need more than two SATA ports, you’ll need to look at other options.
New for the summer of 2022, the Z690I Aorus Ultra Plus is a Mini-ITX update of the Aorus Ultra. If you remember, Gigabyte confirmed stability issues on that board when running the PCIe slot at the full PCIe 4.0 bandwidth. So the company issued an exchange/refund program and offered a workaround by lowering the PCIe bandwidth to 3.0 speeds. The old board is now the Aorus Ultra Lite and is limited to PCIe 3.0 x16, while the Z690I Aorus Ultra Plus offers the full PCIe 4.0 x16 bandwidth.
History aside, you’ll find the updated board on Newegg(opens in new tab) and Amazon(opens in new tab) for $329.99, boasting the same hardware as the original/Ultra Lite (which isn’t a bad deal now at $150.99). The Ultra Plus has robust power delivery, including 105A SPS MOSFETs, a premium audio codec, two M.2 sockets (none are PCIe 5.0, sadly), fast networking with integrated Wi-Fi 6E and a 2.5 GbE port. It also looks good and is the only Z690 Mini-ITX board that includes onboard RGB lighting. Hardware-wise, it’s well-equipped and sits on the lower end of the Z690 Mini-ITX price range. making it an attractive option for those looking to build a small PC.
The board’s performance across our test suite was average to above average, with nothing notably slow or fast. Power use and memory bandwidth were spot on, as was its tested performance in games. The good news is that we didn’t notice any instability running default/PCIe 4.0 or capture any WHEA errors in our time with the board. It looks like Gigabyte’s update fixed the issue with the board and locked down the previous version to ensure stability on the existing models.
We’ll look at the board’s full list of features and performance below and determine if it carves out a spot on our best motherboards list. Read on to get all the information you need to make an informed buying decision. Before that, here’s a list of specs, directly from Gigabyte’s website.
Specifications: Gigabyte Z690I Aorus Ultra Plus
Socket | LGA1700 |
Chipset | Z690 |
Form Factor | Mini-ITX |
Voltage Regulator | 13 Phase (10+1+2, 105A SPS MOSFETs for Vcore) |
Video Ports | (1) HDMI (v2.0) |
(1) DisplayPort (v1.4) | |
USB Ports | (1) USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C (20 Gbps) |
(3) USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10 Gbps) | |
(2) USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) | |
(2) USB 2.0 (480 Mbps) | |
Network Jacks | (1) 2.5 GbE |
Audio Jacks | (2) Analog + SPDIF |
Legacy Ports/Jacks | ✗ |
Other Ports/Jack | ✗ |
PCIe x16 | (1) v5.0 (x16) |
PCIe x8 | ✗ |
PCIe x4 | ✗ |
PCIe x1 | ✗ |
DIMM Slots | (2) DDR5 6400+(OC), 64GB Capacity |
M.2 Sockets | (2) PCIe 4.0 x4 (64 Gbps) / PCIe (up to 80mm) |
U.2 Ports | ✗ |
SATA Ports | (2) SATA3 6 Gbps (Supports RAID 0/1) |
USB Headers | (1) USB v3.2 Gen 1, Type-C (5 Gbps) |
(1) USB v3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) | |
(1) USB v2.0 (480 Mbps) | |
Fan/Pump Headers | (3) 4-Pin (CPU, Watercooling CPU, System Fan) |
RGB Headers | (1) aRGB (3-pin) |
(1) AURA RGB (4-pin) | |
Diagnostics Panel | ✗ |
Internal Button/Switch | ✗ |
SATA Controllers | ✗ |
Ethernet Controller(s) | Intel I225-V (2.5 Gbps) |
Wi-Fi / Bluetooth | Intel AX411 Wi-Fi 6E (2×2 ax, MU-MIMO, 2.4/5/6 GHz, 160 MHz, BT 5.2) |
USB Controllers | ✗ |
HD Audio Codec | Realtek ALC4080 |
DDL/DTS | ✗ / DTS:X Ultra |
Warranty | 3 Years |
Inside the Box of the Gigabyte Z690I Aorus Ultra Plus
Gigagbyte includes several accessories along with the board. The basics are all there, including multiple fan header adapters (a couple of the 4-pin headers are not the standard size), a USB 2.0 header (same as the USB ports, a non-standard header to save on board real estate), SATA cables, and more. Again, my Gigabyte sample did not include a driver disk/USB. If yours arrives without, get the latest drivers from Gigabyte’s site. Here’s a list of the included extras.
- (2) SATA 6Gb/s cables
- (3) 4-pin to 4-pin fan adapters
- RGB extension cable
- USB extension cable
- 4-pin to Molex cable
- Wi-Fi antennas
- M.2 SSD screw packages
- User manual
Design of the Z690I Aorus Ultra Plus
Test System Components
CPU | Intel Core i9-12900K |
Memory | GSkill Trident Z DDR5-5600 CL36 (F5-5600U3636C16GX2-TZ5RK) |
ADATA XPG Lancer DDR5-6000 CL40 (AX5U6000C4016G-DCLARBK) | |
GSkill Trident Z Neo DDR4-3600 (F4-3600C16Q-32GTZN) | |
GSkill Trident Z Royal DDR4-4000 (F4-4000C18Q-32GTRS) | |
GPU | Asus TUF RTX 3070 |
Cooling | Coolermaster MasterLiquid PL360 Flux |
PSU | EVGA Supernova 850W P6 |
Software | Windows 11 64-bit (21H2, Build 22000.282) |
Graphics Driver | NVIDIA Driver 496.13 |
Sound | Integrated HD audio |
Network | Integrated Networking (GbE or 2.5 GbE) |
Benchmark Settings
Synthetic Benchmarks and Settings | |
Procyon | Version 2.0.249 64 |
Office Suite, Video Editing (Premiere Pro), Photo Editing (Photoshop, Lightroom Classic) | |
3DMark | Version 2.20.7290 64 |
Firestrike Extreme and Time Spy Default Presets | |
Cinebench R23 | Version RBBENCHMARK330542 |
Open GL Benchmark – Single and Multi-threaded | |
Blender | Version 3.0.1 |
Full benchmark (all 3 tests) | |
Application Tests and Settings | |
LAME MP3 | Version SSE2_2019 |
Mixed 271MB WAV to mp3: Command: -b 160 –nores (160Kb/s) | |
HandBrake CLI | Version: 1.2.2 |
Sintel Open Movie Project: 4.19GB 4K mkv to x264 (light AVX) and x265 (heavy AVX) | |
Corona 1.4 | Version 1.4 |
Custom benchmark | |
7-Zip | Version 21.03-beta |
Integrated benchmark (Command Line) | |
Game Tests and Settings | |
Far Cry 6 | Ultra Preset – 1920 x 1080, HD Textures ON |
F1 2021 | Ultra Preset – 1920 x 1080, HBAO+, RT Med, TAA + 16xAF, Bahrain, FPS Counter ON |
Our standard benchmarks and power tests are performed using the CPU’s stock frequencies (including any default boost/turbo), with all power-saving features enabled. We set optimized defaults in the BIOS and the memory by enabling the XMP profile. For this baseline testing, the Windows power scheme is set to Balanced (default), so the PC idles appropriately.
To get the most out of the Intel Alder Lake chips, you need to be on Windows 11 with its updated scheduler. In most cases, Windows 10 performs well. However, some tests (Cinebench R20, Corona and POVRay) take a significant hit. In short, if you’re going with Alder Lake, you must upgrade to Windows 11 for the best results across the board. That may change with patching and updates in the future, though.