Asus announced three new Wi-Fi 7 products today, including a tri-band ROG Rapture GT gaming router, a dual-band router, and a new Wi-Fi 7 USB adapter.

The ROG Rapture GT-BE19000 has a familiar ’80s retro-future look shared by predecessors like the quad-band GT-BE98, along with most of the same specs, including two 10Gbps and five 2.5Gbps ethernet ports. It also supports 320MHz channel bandwidth on the 6GHz band, which unlocks much higher throughput (although you’ll need a 2Gbps or higher connection to your ISP for that to shine).

A picture of the back of the ROG Rapture GT-BE19000, showing seven ethernet ports: four 2.5Gbps and two 10Gbps.
The ROG Rapture GT-BE19000 has seven ethernet ports. Image: Asus

Since the GT-BE19000 uses Wi-Fi 7’s multilink operation feature, you can connect a supported device to the 6GHz and 5GHz band at the same time for increased throughput, less latency, and more stability.

Asus’ other new router is the comparatively modest dual-band RT-BE86U. It’s Wi-Fi 7, so it can support multilink operation across the 2.4GHz and 5Ghz bands. It also has a 10Gbps WAN port for connecting to your modem or fiber ONT, along with four 2.5Gbps ethernet ports for wiring up your gaming PC and whatnot.

A picture of the Asus RT-86U from the front. It’s black, has a red chevron-shaped piece at the bottom, and three antennas jutting from the top.
The RT-86U, a dual-band Wi-Fi 7 router. Image: Asus
A picture of the USB-BE92, which is angular, black, and longer than wide, with futuristic lines and a ROG eye logo on it.
Stick this in your PC and download with it. Image: Asus

Finally, Asus announced the ROG USB-BE92, an external USB Wi-Fi 7 card. It connects using USB-A or USB-C, and Asus says it should work with Windows 10 or 11 PCs out of the box — just plug it in and go. It’s an easy way to add Wi-Fi 7 to a computer once you’ve upgraded to a Wi-Fi 7 router, unlocking features like MLO for better stability and faster throughput.

Asus didn’t announce any release dates or prices for these devices.