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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › what’s the best motherboard currently?
r/buildapc on Reddit: What’s the best motherboard currently?
January 28, 2025 -

I currently can’t find a good motherboard. Trying to find a motherboard that can support gen 4/5 stuff and performs fast. Not looking for crazy expensive or overly cheap ones, any ideas?

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › what are good budget motherboards?
r/buildapc on Reddit: What are good budget motherboards?
January 14, 2026 -

Recently i’ve been wanting to look into some good motherboards for not too expensive. Sticking with ATX/AM4 socket boards, what are some good ones?

So far, i’ve found:

  • Gigabyte B550 Eagle WIFI6

  • MSI MAG B550 Tomahawk Max Wifi

  • MSI B550 A-Pro

If anyone has good recommendations, please leave a suggestion. Preferably in the $100-$150 range.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › what's a good motherboard that can be bought right now and will support amd's zen 6 or even higher?
r/buildapc on Reddit: What's a good motherboard that can be bought right now and will support AMD's Zen 6 or even higher?
December 10, 2025 -

Hello, I plan to build a new AM5 computer to replace my current 10 year old computer. Since I currently have an i3 8100, a 1050 ti and 8gb of ddr4 and everything I use it for works really well (gaming, video and audio editing, sound production) I was thinking of buying a 7500f since it would be the cheapest option and still a significant upgrade over the i3.

I plan to eventually upgrade the 7500f to a comparable mid end or even a high end range option from Zen 6 (or maybe Zen 7 if that is on AM5) as they are rumored to have higher core counts. For that I would like to get a decent motherboard that is at most 200€. I need at least two PCie 4.0 M2 NVME slots.

I have looked at the following options and can't decide which would be the best: ASRock B650M-HDV/M.2 for 114€, ASUS TUF Gaming B650M-E for 167€ and the Gigabyte B650 EAGLE for 144€.

I initially wanted to go for the ASRock option since it was the cheapest, but upon further thinking I would rather not risk having my CPU die later when I upgrade to a higher end CPU.

The Asus B650M-E is what I am leaning towards currently because it fits all my needs and it seems like the best motherboard out of the ones I mentioned.

The Gigabyte B650 EAGLE is another seemingly good option which would do fine for me.

I also looked at some B850 motherboards, but I don't want to spend more money on an overkill motherboard when a B650 might just work fine, at least for the mid range options which future generations offer.

Which motherboard should I get? As I mentioned I have a 200€ budget and for mid range CPUs of current generation the B650 boards seem good. Since the boards I mentioned in this post don't come close to the 200€ mark, I would be willing to buy a more expensive motherboard if it would guarantee a smoother experience with the future AM5 generations.

Edit: thanks for the help everyone, I have decided to also look at the Gigabyte B850 DS3H since it is 20€ cheaper on German Amazon compared to the B650M-E model I was looking at on a local retailer.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › which brand has the best motherboard for gaming?
r/buildapc on Reddit: Which brand has the best motherboard for gaming?
March 18, 2025 -

I am a complete noob when it comes to building Pcs. This is my first time building one but I am not sure which gaming motherboard is the best. Reviews available online are so confusing. I still can't figure out the major differences between the motherboards available. ‎People who have built gaming rigs recently, what do you think is the best motherboard for gaming that balances performance, stability, and future upgrade potential? Plus I'm wondering if spending more on high end boards is worth it for gaming orr if mid-range motherboards are more than enough?

Top answer
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Grab basically any b650 or b850 mobo And no, spending more will do squat for gaming.
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Motherboards are very confusing! But they actually don't affect performance very much - they're more of a platform for all of your other hardware. Motherboard brands typically have models on both the low and high end of the spectrum in terms of price and features, so it's not really possible to narrow it down to just one brand. It's pretty common for cheaper motherboards to have the same upgrade paths and even the same base-level features as the more expensive ones. More expensive ones typically have special functionality, higher overhead for overclocking in addition to better heat management for super power hungry CPUs!These are very much special features that most PC builders don't need or really even use. Deciding what motherboard to get is something that I do on a case-by-case basis when planning out a build. The thing that matters the most to me is compatibility with the CPU I want, and second to that is any special functionality like Wifi or extra USB ports. Apart from that, it's generally a very safe bet to aim for a more mid-range motherboard when making a gaming build. But CPU compatibility should be the main factor when choosing a board for sure. I've even had luck with going for the lower end for motherboards, but in any case, I'd advise against going for the cheapest option. I'm sure you will have questions, but I hope that this information can at least point you in the right direction. :)
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › best motherboard for high end gaming + creating
r/buildapc on Reddit: Best motherboard for high end gaming + creating
October 13, 2025 -

Hello! I was looking at a lot of motherboards recently but really want to see ways I can save money and want to see what you guys think

So I am going to be buying everything on Black Friday to get it as cheap as possible and here are the parts I’m going with

9800x3d 5090 FE - already purchased G.Skill trident z5 neo rgb 32gb OR 64gb Asus rog strix pg27ucdm And most likely a Samsung 990 pro 4tb m.2 ssd

I’ve been looking at the Asus tuf x870 + wifi, but I’ve seen a lot of people complaining about it.

All I really care about is a good Ethernet, fast usb ports, and gen 5 pcie

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › need recommendations for a motherboard for my gaming pc build
r/buildapc on Reddit: Need Recommendations for a Motherboard for My Gaming PC Build
May 3, 2025 -

Hi everyone,

I'm in the process of building a new gaming PC and would love some advice on choosing the right motherboard. Here are the components I have so far:

GPU: ASUS TUF 5070 Ti CPU: AMD 9800X3D

My budget for the motherboard is around $300 USD.

I'm mainly into gaming, so I need something that can support these components well and ensure good performance.

Do you have any recommendations or personal experiences with specific models that you'd suggest? Any advice on features I should prioritize would also be greatly appreciated!

Thanks in advance for your help!

Top answer
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https://pcpartpicker.com/product/tccBD3/asrock-b850-pro-a-atx-am5-motherboard-b850-pro-a https://pcpartpicker.com/product/pqkqqs/asrock-b850-pro-a-wifi-atx-am5-motherboard-b850-pro-a-wifi i built with the m-atx version of this board with a 9800x3d, it went completely flawlessly features that matter to me are # usb ports, # m.2 slots, wifi if you need it
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Asrock B650M Pro RS $130, does everything you need. You'll get literally exactly the same performance from that motherboard as one that costs $1200. However, it's mATX, silver / white in color, and doesn't have wifi or bluetooth. But apart from the last issue, any motherboard you're paying for above that one, you're doing it for aesthetic reasons. And that's fine! I personally wouldn't get that motherboard unless I was building a small mATX system in something like a Lian Li A3-mATX or NR200. But that's while I mostly don't care about aesthetics, I do want WiFi. In which case the $140 Asrock B650M Pro RS WiFi is what I'd get. But, most people do care about aesthetics. Or want / need more than 3 M.2 slots, or more USB ports on the back, etc. etc. But you kind of need to figure out what you want / need / care about and then pick from there. I will note that there have been some weird problems with Asrock motherboards and the 9800X3D. It doesn't seem to be like with ASUS motherboards with the 7800X3D where they were literally exploding due to a product wide problem caused by ASUS. But basically any motherboard over about $160 from MSI, Gigabyte, ASUS, or Asrock will be totally fine and give you the best possible performance from the 9800X3D and 5070 Ti. PCIe 5.0 for the main PCIe slot is pointless and offers no real performance benefit, so the older B650 motherboards are not slower than the newer B850 ones.
Find elsewhere
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › best motherboard?
r/buildapc on Reddit: Best motherboard?
January 8, 2026 -

I'm having more trouble choosing a motherboard for my PC than I'd like. I've been looking for several days and have narrowed it down to these two:

ASRock X870 Pro RS WiFi, or the MSI MAG B850 Tomahawk MAX WIFI. The first one is €35 cheaper.

My PC specs are:

Monitor: Dell Alienware aw2725d 280Hz 1440p GPU: Asus Prime RTX 5070 Ti CPU: Ryzen 7 7800X3D

I don't need more than one PCIe x16 slot. I'll only be connecting one card, and ideally, I'd like two M.2 slots just in case. I play wired, so the WiFi chip isn't a big deal. The idea is to overclock, and I'd like to have to change the processor before the motherboard. What do you think of these two options? Anything better in that price range?

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/pcmasterrace › what is considered to be the best motherboard brand at the moment?
r/pcmasterrace on Reddit: What is considered to be the best motherboard brand at the moment?
July 26, 2025 -

Hello dear Pc community,

I was really into pc building about 6-7 years ago and I'm guessing things must have changed, quality controls got mostly worse across pretty much every industry so I wanted to get some insight on what y'all have to say on which motherboard brands are in the elite category/the ones you always pick?

Best regards

Top answer
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Eh, ASUS has been considered a premium brand for a long time but they've got horrid customer service, god forbid you ever have a problem, and they've been exposed recently for having some security flaws regarding their bloatware (Armoury Crate) that they inject into your OS with an ASUS motherboard. Additionally, they've been under fire before for overclocking 7000X3D and 13th/14th gen chips out-of-the-box specifically, and killing them (while the 13th/14th gen chips are flawed & have degradation problems, ASUS's automatic overclocking exasperated the issue on their boards, and while the 7000X3D chips have since had fixed BIOs revisions that don't kill the chips anymore, ASUS was still being absolute assholes to consumers wanting to return their boards when the issue they created arose) Gigabyte's alright (and do have their premium boards as well,) but there's stuff like their X3D Turbo Mode feature which basically just disables the 2nd CCD and hyperthreading (which, while the non-X3D CCD on dual-CCD X3D CPUs can hamper performance if the cores are assigned incorrectly by Windows, turning your 16-core, 32-thread CPU into an 8-core, 8-thread CPU WILL affect performance in other scenarios, and shouldn't be labeled as a "make PC faster!11!1" option.) More controversially, they've been under fire before for having their graphics card models specifically crack, before denying the warranty on those cracked cards, before media & users found out it was a design flaw entirely on Gigabyte's part - while not motherboard-related, it showed a darker side to how Gigabyte will act when their product has a design flaw and is screwing over customers, why would they act any different to a motherboard defect?) ASRock has a pretty good reputation for having decent budget boards, but they've also had a recent controversy where their boards in particular have been killing a lot of 9000X3D series CPUs, and to my understanding they don't seem to know why or how because there are still dead CPU posts on the ASRock subreddit nearly half a year later after the problem first became public. MSI is alright, but, like ASUS and Gigabyte, their budget boards are pretty primitive. I don't think they've had any motherboard-related controversies recently (there was a controversy regarding some bad AIOs a while back, but I don't know much about it,) with that said though they're not much better in any particular way than ASUS and Gigabyte, MSI is just, well, alright. NZXT has a couple of motherboards available and to my understanding they're not bad, just priced on the higher side, though they did have the controversy regarding their predatory rent-a-PC program, and while mostly unrelated to their motherboards, some may still be turned off by how NZXT treats their customers in that department. In short, each and every company here has high-end, good boards, and each company has bad boards too. ASRock's got some good budget boards compared to the others, but they've currently got some problems with AM5 X3D chips, so watch out for that. All of these companies have gotten in shit for bad practices one way or another, really the best you can do is just find the motherboard that's best for your needs specifically. Doesn't really matter what brand, there's shitty boards and good boards from every vendor.
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MSI MAG Tomahawk series, great VRMs on these boards.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › which motherboard is best for build?
r/buildapc on Reddit: Which motherboard is best for build?
August 18, 2024 -

I don't have much knowledge on pc parts and I'm building my first pc with a 7800x3d and 4070 super and i have 4 options of motherboards that I'm not sure what the difference between them except for number of ports. Which one should I pick based on compatibility of my parts and all of your experiences? P.S. I'm not concerned about price.

Unfinished Build Here Thanks.

  • MSI MAG B650 TOMAHAWK WIFI ATX AM5

  • MSI B650 GAMING PLUS WIFI ATX AM5

  • Gigabyte B650 AORUS ELITE AX V2 ATX AM5

  • Asus TUF GAMING B650-PLUS WIFI ATX AM5

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › for mid to high-level gaming builds, who builds the most reliable mobo these days?
r/buildapc on Reddit: For mid to high-level gaming builds, who builds the most reliable MoBo these days?
March 13, 2023 -

Coming back into the scene after a 7 year hiatus and trying to understand which manufacturer has been putting out the most reliable boards these days. I'm making the assumption that a higher end MoBo will have most/all the features I specifically need as I'm not a maxed out settings type of gamer by any means. My specific use case would be for a ~mid-to-higher tier gaming and media, 1440p build in the $1500-2000 range. I'm also leaning towards an AMD CPU 7k+ & AMD GPU combo for additional details.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › which motherboard to choose for amd gaming pc?
r/buildapc on Reddit: Which motherboard to choose for AMD gaming PC?
January 3, 2026 -

Hello, I'm doing a new build, and decided to go with AMD processor this time. Building a high end gaming desktop, might do some streaming as well.

I'm planning to use AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D Raphael AM5 4.2GHz 8-Core Boxed Processor

My graphics card right now is a 3080, I was going to keep it for now, unless you think thats a mistake, but could always upgrade it later. My monitor is 1440

I can't quite figure out what motherboard to get. I've checked tom's hardware, and some of their recommended boards are "sold out" at microcenter.

Tom's hardware recomended: ASRock X870E Taichi but I would have to get it somewhere else like new egg. Is there an upgraded version of this model that is reputable or any other recommendation? Thanks

So I guess my main questions are which motherboard, and then is the 3080 good enough to be fine for a few years, or would you upgrade before prices go crazy? I've been happy with its performance right now though.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/buildapc › good motherboards?
r/buildapc on Reddit: Good Motherboards?
February 6, 2024 -

Im trying to find good parts for a high end gaming pc, but I’m struggling to find a motherboard. Any recommendations?

Top answer
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The CPU platform you're using usually decides your motherboard for you. Since I have no idea which CPU you've picked, I'll just give a run down of how I think about motherboard costs. An excellent motherboard will give you better controls over overclocking, faster data carrying lanes, more safeguards, maybe better component quality control, but very often for multiple times the price of a budget board on the same chipset. Ultimately, it can't do all that much to push your key performance components (except the ram) further, so I would always recommend you spend more on those instead of on your motherboard. If budget constraints are important to you, I would always pick a reputable brand that's only one to two tiers above the budget option. You'll get the quality control guarantee and the safeguards you need and you'll save maximum dollar for better GPUs/CPUs/Ram while having a motherboard that doesn't get in the way of their performance. If you're benching and overclocking CPUs for a living, then sure, a flagship motherboard like the TaiChi is worth it, but keep in mind that you can often get multiple of the midrange boards for the same price and neither of them are likely to fail to begin with. Since you mentioned high end, I'm going to highlight the MSI Tomahawk Mag and the ASRock Riptide Z790 for Intel 12-14gen CPUs. Be aware that the Strix, the Asus ROG flagship brand, for this chipset has some coil whine issues, as does the Gigabyte Aorus series. The corresponding X670 motherboards would also do quite well if you picked an AMD CPU instead. Unless you're doing something that absolutely requires more than ten PCIE5 lanes, I would give the extreme boards a pass. You'd be paying extra to get a higher bandwidth ceiling that you'll probably never exploit.
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reddit.com › r/buildapc › what would be the best mother board for around the 100-200 dollar budget
r/buildapc on Reddit: What would be the best mother board for around the 100-200 dollar budget
May 29, 2025 -

Ive put together this list but still cant figure out what would be the best possible motherboard

PCPartPicker Part List: https://pcpartpicker.com/list/gj6NFZ

CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D 4.7 GHz 8-Core Processor

CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-D15S chromax.black 82.51 CFM CPU Cooler

Memory: Corsair Vengeance 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR5-6000 CL30 Memory

Storage: Samsung 990 Pro 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive

Video Card: Gigabyte GAMING OC GeForce RTX 5080 16 GB Video Card

Case: Corsair FRAME 4000D RS ARGB ATX Mid Tower Case

Power Supply: Corsair RM1000e (2025) 1000 W Fully Modular ATX Power Supply

Operating System: Microsoft Windows 11 Home Retail - USB 64-bit

Case Fan: Corsair RS120 ARGB 72.8 CFM 120 mm Fan

Case Fan: Corsair RS140 ARGB 95.5 CFM 140 mm Fans 2-Pack