Your USB port configuration is still far from correct.
If you recall we discussed and quantified the number of USB ports your motherboard contains.
4 x USB 2.0 ports (black) on the rear - (4 ports total)
4 x USB 3.0/1 ports (Blue) on the rear - 4 x USB3 and 4 x USB2 (8 ports total)
2 x USB 3.2 ports (Red) on the rear - 2 x USB 3.2 TypeC and 2 x USB2 TypeC (4 ports total)
Total of 16 USB ports - 10 physical ports and 6 virtual ports
View attachment 524959
Internal connectors include:
2 x USB2 header ports - Internal connector type (4 ports total)
1 x USB3.0/1 header port - USB3 connector type (4 ports total)
1 x USB TypeC header port - TypeC+Sw connector type (2 ports Total)
Total of 10 USB ports - 7 physical ports and 3 virtual ports
View attachment 524960
This means your Hackintool USB window is showing only 24 of 26 ports. 2 ports are not showing or connected to your case, possibly the 2 ports from the TypeC header?
But nearly all the USB port connector Types are set incorrectly.
You need to clarify which port in the Hackintool USB window matches with your case ports, you need to do this for all the ports, even if you don't plan to use them.
This is so you know you are eliminating/deleting the correct port, i.e. the ones you won't need to use, when you start reducing the active port numbers down to a max of 15 ports.
The USB port discovery phase will require that you test each external port on the front of the case and rear I/O plate with a USB2 pen drive and then a USB3 pen drive. Write down the port that is activated when a USB pen drive is inserted. Keep a list of the ports, double check that the ports are correctly identified.
You may need to switch the motherboard USB2 headers to fully discover which port is associated with each of the headers. I had to on my systems.