Great article. I bought one of these last week when I saw it on Reddit as I needed more power for 3D CAD design and to reduce bottleneck on my R9 Fury Nitro which has up until now been paired with a Xeon E3-1225 V2 , which has been struggling to keep up.
Anyway, I bought my brother's old DS3H B450 board from Gigabytye, a stick of ram, and his old case as he was moving on to an Itx system. So I confirm the parts work with his Ryzen 2600 from launch, when all the other parts were bought. Interestingly, I cannot manage to get the thing to post now that the 1600 AF is in there, and my only suspicion is that a BIOS update is required for it to work. This makes sense, considering the rig half been out of commission for most of a year so I would expect it is out of date. Not sure if this gives any indication to the 12nm process and to what extent this chip is substantially different from those prior. One would assume a 1600 would work on a board that a 2600 worked on otherwise. However, this could be as simple as the motherboard not knowing how to address the chip with a slightly different model number, regardless of it's true physical differences under the lid.
Just thought I'd throw that it in there. My brother will be returning to town soon so we will update the bios and post results. I have beefier, but still entry level cooler to pair it with and so it will be interestint to see what overclocking numbers we get. A sample of 1 tells us essentially nothing of value, unfortunately.