Since the release of Windows 11, many users of AMD Ryzen platforms have reported errors with fTPM enabled. AMD confirmed the source of the fTPM issue on the Ryzen platform in early March this year, which involved intermittent delays introduced between the flash memory and the chip related to fTPM, and said it would provide microcode based on AGESA 1.2.0.7 or later in May this year to fix the fTPM issue.
Although it hasn’t entered May yet, MSI has
started to release BIOS based on AGESA 1.2.0.7. The first to receive the new firmware is the X570 motherboard, including four products: MEG X570 GODLIKE, MEG X570S ACE MAX, MEG X570 ACE, and MEG X570S Unify-X. The main thing is that users of AMD Ryzen platforms can finally get rid of the fTPM problem, not by disabling fTPM or using a separate TPM physical module.
Other users who use MSI motherboards need to wait a little longer. It is expected that MSI will gradually release the BIOS based on AGESA 1.2.0.7 for each model in May. Some users said that some 300/400 series motherboards will skip the BIOS based on AGESA 1.2.0.6 Patch C because the interval is too short. In addition, MSI will also introduce a special unlocked BIOS used by X570 motherboards to support overclocking of the Ryzen 7 5800X3D.