Of the nine boards we hope to cover across the Ivy Bridge release, we have a large range of prices and feature sets to consider. Styling seems to be of great importance to these companies, especially when they either all follow a similar color scheme or decide to spray everything with a coat of gold paint!

Today you may see many reviews with Sandy Bridge results being posted. We have decided to wait until we are allowed to publish Ivy Bridge results in order to fully test these boards to the limit, and show how they respond under the latest technology (and perhaps after a BIOS update or two). However, important chipset information is at our hands and we can discuss important changes to motherboard design—the long awaited addition of PCIe 3.0 and native USB 3.0 to the Intel mainstream chipset, but also to new technologies, such as Virtual V-Sync and HyperFormance that comes with Virtu MVP, or just how good ASUS' new memory topology might be.

  ASRock
Z77 Extreme4
ASRock
Z77 Extreme6
ASUS
P8Z77-V Pro
ASUS
P8Z77-V Deluxe
Price $141 $177 TBC TBC
Size ATX ATX ATX ATX
Power 8 + 4 8 + 4 12 + 4 16 + 4
Video HDMI 1.4a
DVI-D
D-Sub
DisplayPort
HDMI 1.4a
DVI-D
D-Sub
DisplayPort
HDMI
DVI-D
D-Sub
DisplayPort
HDMI
LAN Broadcom BCM57781 Broadcom BCM57781 Intel 82579V Intel 82579V
Realtek 8111F
Audio Realtek ALC898 Realtek ALC898 Realtek ALC892 Realtek ALC898
Mini PCIe No Yes No No
Wifi No No Yes Yes
SATA 6Gbps 2 + 2 2 + 2 2 + 2 2 + 2
SATA 3Gbps 4 + 0 4 + 0 4 + 0 4 + 0
USB 3.0 6 6 8 8
USB 2.0 8 8 10 8
Fan Headers 6 6 6 6
SLI/XFire Two GPUs Two GPUs Two GPUs Two GPUs
NA Warranty 3 Years 3 Years 3 Years 3 Years

 

  Gigabyte
GA-Z77X-UD3H Wifi
Gigabyte
GA-Z77MX-D3H
MSI
Z77A-GD65
ECS
Z77H2-AX
Biostar
TZ77XE4
Price TBC TBC $180 $319 $169
Size ATX mATX ATX ATX ATX
Power 6 + 1 + 2 +1 TBC 8 + 2 12 + 2 10 + 2
Video DisplayPort
HDMI
DVI-D
D-Sub
HDMI
DVI-D
D-Sub
HDMI
DVI-D
D-Sub
HDMI
D-Sub
DisplayPort
HDMI
DVI-D
D-Sub
LAN Atheros Atheros Intel 82579V Realtek 8111E Realtek 8111E
Audio Via VT2021 Via VT2021 Realtek ALC898 Realtek ALC892 Realtek ALC898
Mini PCIe Yes No No mSATA +
mini PCIe
No
Wifi PCIe Card No No Yes No
SATA 6Gbps 2 + 0 2 + 0 2 + 2 2 + 0 2 + 2
SATA 3Gbps 4 + 0 4 + 0 4 + 0 4 + 0 4 + 0
USB 3.0 8 4 4 6 4
USB 2.0 6 10 10 6 8
Fan Headers 5 3 5 3 3
SLI/XFire Two GPUs Two GPUs Two GPUs Three GPUs Two GPUs
NA Warranty 3 Years 3 Years 3 Years 3 Years 3 Years

There is a lot to digest regarding Z77. If you are planning an Ivy Bridge build, we want to hear what you want out of your boards or which ones you are considering to purchase. A little while after these boards, we should be tackling some rather interesting mini-ITX ones as well, so stay tuned!

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  • DanNeely - Monday, April 9, 2012 - link

    This is similar to what happened with the USB1->2 transition. The newer controller is significantly bigger (read more expensive) and very few people have more than one or two devices using it per computer. I suspect the 8x (Haswell) chipset will be mixed as well; simply because the total number of ports on the chipset is so much higher than it was a decade ago (vs older boards were all but the lowest end models added more USB from 3rd party controllers).
  • ASUSTechMKT - Monday, April 9, 2012 - link

    mSATA currently has very little penetration on the market and cost wise it is much lower to purchase a larger cache SSD for the same or lower cost. We would prefer to focus on bringing implementations that offer immediate value to users.

    As for the Intel nics all our launch boards across the board for ATX ( Standard and above all feature Intel lan ) we have been leading in this regard for a couple of generations.

    In regards to USB 3 we offer more than the standard on many boards but keep in mind many users only have 1 USB3 device.
  • jimnicoloff - Sunday, April 8, 2012 - link

    Maybe I missed something from an earlier post, but could someone please tell me why these don't have light peak? Are they waiting to go optical and it is not ready yet? Having my USB3 controlled by Intel instead of another chip is not enough to make me want to upgrade my Z68 board...
  • repoman27 - Sunday, April 8, 2012 - link

    Thunderbolt controllers are relatively expensive ($20-30) and their value is fairly limited on a system using a full size ATX motherboard that has multiple PCIe slots. Including two digital display outputs, an x4 and a couple x1 PCIe slots on a motherboard provides essentially all the same functionality as Thunderbolt but at a way lower cost.
  • ASUSTechMKT - Monday, April 9, 2012 - link

    Almost all of our boards feature a special TB header which allows for you to easily equip our boards with a Thunderbolt add on card which we will release at the end of the month. Expect an approximate cost of $40 dollars, this card will connect to the TB header and install in a X4 slot providing you with Thunderbolt should you want it. A great option for those who want it and for those who do not they do not pay for it.
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, April 10, 2012 - link

    Sounds like a reasonable choice for something that's still rather expensive and a very niche product.

    Am I correct in thinking that the mobo header is to bring in the DisplayPort out channel without impacting bandwidth available for devices?
  • jimwatkins - Sunday, April 8, 2012 - link

    I've made it this far on my venerable OC Q6600, but I can't wait any longer. I do wish they weren't so stingy on the 6 core as I could use it, but I just can't justify the price differential (w 3 kids that is.)
  • androticus - Sunday, April 8, 2012 - link

    USB 3.0 descriptions and depictions are contradictory. The platform summary table says there are 4. The Intel diagram shows up to 4 on front and back (and the diagram is itself very confusing, because there are 4 USB 3.0 ports indicated on the chipset, and then they show 2 going to hubs, and 2 going directly to the jacks.) The text of the article says there can only be 2 USB 3.0 ports.

    What is the correct answer?
  • mariush - Sunday, April 8, 2012 - link

    I think there's 2 real ports (full bandwidth ports) and the Intel solution uses 2 additional chips that act like "hubs", splitting each real port into 4 separate ports.

    Basically the bandwidth of each real port gets split if there are several devices connected to the same hub.

    Hub as far as I know means that what the hub receives sends to all four ports (and then the devices at the end of each port ignore the data if it's not for them).
    This would be different than a switch, which has the brains to send the data packages only to the proper port.
  • plamengv - Sunday, April 8, 2012 - link

    DZ77GA-70K makes DX79SI looks like a bad joke (which it is really).

    LGA 2011 turns into an epic fail and DZ77GA-70K is the proof. I have 1366 system and I have zero will to get LGA 2011 system thanks to the crappy tech decisions somebody made there. Six cores is the top? Again? An old 32nm process? Really? Chipset with nothing new inside but troubles? Since 1366 something strange is going on and Intel fails to see it. The end user can get better manufacturing tech for the video card than for the CPU. First it was 45nm CPU with 40nm GPU and now 28nm GPU and 32nm CPU and Intel call that high end? Really?

    Everything that DX79SI should have been you can find inside DZ77GA-70K.

    1. DZ77GA-70K has high quality TI 1394 firewire controller, while DX79SI has cheap VIA one that no any audio pro would ever want to deal with.
    2. DZ77GA-70K has next best after Intel SATA controller by Marvell to get 2 more SATA 6.0 and eSATA vs zero extra SATA and hard to believe no any eSATA on DX79SI.
    3. Intel USB 3.0 vs crappy Renesas.

    DZ77GA-70K has everything to impress, including the two Intel LANs vs the Realtek that everyone else is using.

    DZ77GA-70K fails in only one thing - it had to be LGA 2011, not 1155 that will be just 4 cores like forever and has zero future.

    Wake up INTEL!

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