MSI P67A-GD65

MSI P67A-GD65 @ PureOC

“The latest P67 board to hit our bench is the MSI P67A-GD65, a premium board that promises innovative features at a great price of $180. There are some very interesting features here, and MSI is serving notice they’re ready to play hardball with the competition.”

Sapphire Mini E350

Sapphire Mini E350 @ PureOC

“We’re looking at the Sapphire Mini E350 motherboard embedded with the AMD E350 APU. The E350 is AMD’s latest release CPU renamed an Accelerated Proccessing Unit(APU). Fusion has been talked about for some time and it has now become a reality.”

MINIX 890GX-USB3

MINIX 890GX-USB3 @ TweakTown

“But after taking some time to look over their site and what they have to offer, it is certainly one that I will have in my head for some time to come. We had the chance to take a look at a very interesting offer from J&W. It is a Mini-ITX motherboard built around the AMD 890GX chipset, complete with four SATA 3.0 ports, two USB 3.0 and three network interfaces. There is an n-spec wireless card and two GBe LAN ports. This pint sized product also is capable of supporting up to a 95 Watt AMD CPU.”

ASUS P8P67 LE

ASUS P8P67 LE @ ITShootout

“The P8P67 LE is the baby of Asus’ extensive full-ATX Sandy Bridge motherboard range. The variant we are looking at today is one of the B3 editions, meaning it doesn’t suffer from the potential SATA issue that plagued the first generation of all P67 motherboards.”

Sapphire Pure Black X58

Sapphire Pure Black X58 @ Legit Reviews

“Sapphire isn’t a new name when it comes to performance computer parts. Sapphire has been manufacturing AMD based graphics cards for a number of years already. Now Sapphire is making a move back to another segment of the enthusiast PC market, and they are poised to take it by storm. Which segment, you may ask?”

ECS P67H2-A2 (B3)

ECS P67H2-A2 (B3) @ iXBT Labs

“ECS P67H2-A2 is a decent motherboard without any special peculiarities. This isn’t bad, because most people do not need those anyway. What we liked: Mostly convenient layout and a few nice design touches, good cooling, interesting and useful bundle and software, sufficient (if not excessive) functionality.”

MSI 890FXA-GD65

MSI 890FXA-GD65 @ Think Computers

“Today we get the chance to check out a full featured motherboard without all of the bloat. The MSI 890FXA-GD65 motherboard with AMD’s 890FX chipset offers a whopping 10 USB ports, 2 of which are USB 3.0. It also includes support for SATA 6GB/s and is AM3+ ready, for those looking to buy the processors coming out later this year. This affordable motherboard is easy to overclock with the provided software and will surely give you your money’s worth. Read on further to get the fully detailed review.”

ECS H61H2-A

ECS H61H2-A @ TBreak

“Opening the box I see that the ECS H61H2-A is supplied with a rear I/O panel, two SATA cables, a drivers CD and a manual. Pretty basic stuff, but at $70 I wasn’t really expecting much. I guess now is a good time to mention that the ECS H61H2-A ships with USB 2.0 ports (on the rear as well as onboard adapters) and SATA II (3GB/s) ports. Such are the bare specs (and perhaps necessities) of an H61 chipset that it doesn’t natively support USB 3.0 or SATA III.”

Gigabyte G1.Assassin

Gigabyte G1.Assassin @ TweakTown

“Well, GIGABYTE has an answer and one that we have been waiting on since CES 2011. We recently showed this off to you in a very brief preview. Well, now we have the performance to go along with these images. This board is the G1.Assassin; part of the G1 Killer line-up. When you pick this board up you get an X58 chipset, a Creative labs X-Fi audio card and a Killer NIC built onto the board. You all get this for $529.99 on NewEgg.com which comes in a little less than buying the parts separately (as we will show you a little later).”

ECS A785GM-M

ECS A785GM-M @ eTeknix

“As of late, hardware has become less expensive and more efficient and so it should with more competition than ever, more brands want to be top of the food chain as it were. There are some users including the gamers and enthusiasts with cash burning a hole in their pockets that will lead them to a high-end board such as the ASUS Crosshair collection or Gigabyte UD7 motherboards but the majority of users won’t believe in paying these top prices for features they will most likely not use.”