There's been a lot of confusion around best gaming motherboards are now helping to clear things up a little.
Brands such as officially more aging processors on future builds of the new OS.
While ASRock in particular has an extensive list of boards with older chipsets like the AMD 300 and Intel 100 series billed as compatible with TPM 2.0, it notes that from Microsoft may vary. Also, many of the officially ed Intel and AMD Us are only compatible with the newer chipsets.
Here's a roundup of confirmed TPM 2.0-compatible chipsets:
ASRock ed chipsets | |
Intel Z170, H170, B150, H110 | AMD 300 series |
Intel Z270, H270, B250 | AMD 400 series |
Intel Z390, Z370, H370, B360, B365, H310, H310C | AMD 500 series |
Intel Z490, H470, B460, H410 | |
Intel Z590, B560, H510, H570 |
Biostar ed chipsets | |
Intel B250 | AMD 300 series |
Intel H310 | AMD 400 series |
Intel B460, H410 | AMD 500 series |
Intel B510, B560, Z590 |
Gigabyte ed chipsets | |
Intel 200 series | AMD 300 series |
Intel 300 series | AMD 400 series |
Intel 400 series | AMD 500 series |
Intel 500 series |
MSI ed chipsets | |
Intel Z170, H170, B150, H110 | AMD 300 series |
Intel Z270, H270, B250 | AMD 400 series |
Intel Z390, Z370, B365, B360, H370, H310 | AMD 500 series |
Intel Z490, B460, H410 | |
Intel Z590, B560, H510 |
If your motherboard is compatible and you know how to install the Windows 11 Insider build, you'll probably need to go into your BIOS to enable virtual TPM as it's usually disabled by default.