While we have not had many Z77 micro-ATX motherboards in to review this generation (something we will be remedying for Haswell), getting to grips with both the Maximus V Gene and the G1.Sniper M3 has been rather fun.  Both of these boards would happily go into a slightly smaller gaming setup and still offer sufficient power when paired with the right cards – take a look at our recent review of multi-GPU gaming to see how a dual GPU setup might perform depending on which processor you may want to get.

Despite both motherboards aiming for roughly the same market, there is a difference between them in terms of which motherboard I would suggest people to buy. 

Conclusion: Gigabyte G1.Sniper M3

On first glance, the Gigabyte G1.Sniper M3 looks like a good board – in terms of performance we are right on the money across the board, and overclocking performance is also competitive with the MVG.  On the motherboard itself is a fairly default chipset arrangement, with five of the SATA ports in a 4+1 arrangement (+1 at right angles to the motherboard), 4 USB 3.0 total from the chipset and an x16 or x8/x8 arrangement for GPUs.

A couple of points do stand out however – the first is the audio.  Onboard we have a Creative CA0132 codec solution, which promises a cleaner sound along with additional filtering and an EM shield to improve electrical noise.  In our tests however, we had to disable all the additional software features in order to get RMAA to run – despite this it still performed well.  Another point to stand out is the PCIe arrangement.  On the face of the board, we have three green full length PCIe slots.  Typically with a microATX board these are arranged in an x8/x1/x8/x4 arrangement, but on the G1.Sniper M3 these are x8/x1/x4/x8.  This allows for two triple slot GPUs (probably a good thing), but unless you are paying attention then, like I did to begin with, cards may go in the x4 slot instead, which is powered by the chipset and offers bad scaling (that is in general across all motherboards).  In this scenario CrossFireX does work, but SLI does not (you need x8 lanes per GPU).  We tested the x16+x4 arrangement and clearly the x8/x8 is preferred.  It is worth noting that using a second GPU like this will block one of the SATA ports.

 

Overall there are not that many extras on the G1.Sniper M3 – the MVG gives extra SATA ports, extra USB 3.0, along with a better fan controls and the software/BIOS package, all for $30 more.  I think Gigabyte pushed the boat out trying to accommodate the Creative CA0132, but it has sort of backfired because other elements end up slightly lacking.  If we had a Killer NIC onboard, as is the case on the G1.Sniper 3, it might be worth a look.  But for $170-$180, this fits right into the range for the Z77X-UD5H or Z77X-UP4 TH, which I would rather go for, even though they are ATX.

Conclusion: ASUS Maximus V Gene

The Maximus V Gene provides a great motherboard with a ton of features, if you do not mind paying the small price premium.  Even when you factor the initial cost in, against all the functionality, the software, the BIOS and the features, it makes financial sense that this board is worth purchasing for the extra green.

On the face of it, we get a high performing board with extra USB 3.0, extra SATA 6 Gbps, SupremeFX III audio, an mPCIe combo card, an Intel NIC, voltage read points, power/reset buttons, a two digit debug, excellent fan controls, and features like ROG Connect, FanXpert II, USB 3.0 Boost, GameFirst for network management and USB BIOS Flashback.

Performance wise the ASUS does quite well, enabling MCT and being very efficient across the board.  With USB 3.0 Boost, our USB numbers while using this feature are enhanced by a good margin.  Overclocking performed quite well, even with our bad CPU!

Any ASUS or ROG motherboard owner should hit up the ROG forums.  If you are having issues, or want to push your hardware a little further, there are users and admins there to help.

As a combined package, the ASUS Maximus V Gene is well worth the money.  At $200 it fits into that price range where most Z77 sales occur, albeit on full sized ATX boards.  For example, at this price range we have the Gigabyte Z77X-UD5H, the MSI Z77 MPower, the ASUS P8Z77-I Deluxe, Gigabyte Z77X-UP4 TH, the ASRock Z77 OC Formula and the ASUS P8Z77-V Pro all as serious contenders, each with their own merits.  But if you want an ROG board, the MVG is a great purchase.

In light of the performance and feature set, I would like to recommend the ASUS Maximus V Gene as a great purchase for those looking for a microATX Z77 motherboard.

Final Words

I know what some of you are thinking.  Why bother reviewing two motherboards so close to the launch of Haswell?  Surely users are going to want a Z87 motherboard instead?  My response to this comes from different angles. 

Firstly, Haswell adoption is not expected to be that high for the first few months.  As noted in various press articles, the initial batches of Haswell have an issue with USB 3.0 devices being recognized after sleep/hibernation.  Even before this issue was brought to light, DigiTimes reported that Haswell is likely to make up fewer than 20% of sales by year end. 

Secondly, e-tailers and home users who want to upgrade from Ivy Bridge to Haswell will be selling their old motherboards and/or processors.  There are a fair few users who stay slightly behind the curve in an effort to save money (this comic from xkcd springs to mind, but not as extreme as that), and users that are making the jump might sell en-mass just to get the newer models.  Ivy Bridge is still relevant if you want a fast system – it may not be the newest in the next couple of months, but you don’t necessarily need the newest to get your work/gaming done.

Of course as a reviewer it is my job to review the cutting edge, but until the Haswell launch is here I cannot publish anything Haswell related.  Nevertheless, our micro-ATX coverage for Haswell plans to be more extensive, so watch this space.

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  • cmdrdredd - Monday, May 13, 2013 - link

    For overclocking and enthusiast oriented boards you get what you pay for. This review wasn't supposed to be catered to budget builders at all.
  • takeship - Monday, May 13, 2013 - link

    I built with first the Asus Gene V, and then the M3 Sniper, all in the last 9 months. Biggest difference: the pci & fan header layout on the Gigabyte made more sense, vs transiting nearly the length of the board with the 3rd Asus fan header. Makes a mess of routing. Headers all along the edges, and the lower (none-blocking) location of the second x8 pcie were a big plus. Not to mention the larger CPU socket area. I seem to recall the Gigabyte had a better fan control setup as well, though I could be wrong (and anyways the 3D UEFI is not good). Top it off with the fact that the Gigabyte was on sale for $140 when I picked it up, far below the $205 I paid for the Asus. I love my Asus board, but I would recommend the Gigabyte over it in an instant.
  • Samus - Monday, May 13, 2013 - link

    Yikes, lost me at Creative Labs...
  • chedrz - Monday, May 13, 2013 - link

    I love my Sniper M3. It's rock-solid, stable, hasn't given me any sort of problem. I guess that makes it the exact opposite of every ASUS board I've ever owned. I was a little worried about the Creative sound also, but I fortunately have a Xonar D2X that I've been using. This board's a champ.
  • jrs77 - Tuesday, May 14, 2013 - link

    I'd wish that GA or ASUS release some high-end, but stripped motherboards where there's only the absolute minimum of components on them.

    Take sound for example. An $30 USB-DAC will beat any onboard-sound solution easily, and noone really needs anything else then the PEG-slots either.
    The mass of USB- and SATA-ports is a waste of efforts aswell, as you usually have a single SSD + HDD, mouse, keyboard, USB-DAC and the front-USB ports for your camera etc.

    Less is more, and less components result in less errors. Additionally, less components result in less board-temperature and cleaner routing.

    Will never happen unfortunately :/
  • Rick83 - Tuesday, May 14, 2013 - link

    The X58-OC did happen. It was apparently a complete failure, judging by how often in featured in giveaways.
    It may have been pared back a bit too much though, with only two USB ports on the back, IIRC. Of course, you can use an external hub for mice and keyboards, so that won't matter.

    But given how it went the first time around, I doubt that anyone else is going to try that any time soon again.

    Also, I think you're oversimplifying. PCI cards still exist, and plenty of people have one that they'd rather use in their new machine. Network cards, sound cards, that kind of thing. Why buy new, when you have a card that works perfectly well?
    Also, I am currently using every one of the MIVG's rear USB outputs, AND two USB hubs.
    Charging mini and micro USB, managing screens, two keyboards, a mouse, an IR receiver, a Joystick, a floppy drive, a camera - I don't think paring back on USB is an option, as I don't even have a printer, scanner, modem or DAC/ADC attached. I'm also using 4 SATA ports, for two SSDs, a hotswap bay and an optical drive. Going down to two is very limiting, given how many disks are supported by almost all cases.
    Considering that you want to market to the masses in order to recoup your investment, as a mainboard maker, I doubt anyone is going to cut features (even features that are there anyway, due to the platform) only to make an expensive board, with no option for expansion.

    And as for onboard sound: It's plenty good to attach a microphone, and the optical outs are also usually just dandy. Saves a USB port for other devices than a USB-DAC.
  • JDG1980 - Tuesday, May 14, 2013 - link

    Check out the Asus P8B-X.
  • Rick83 - Tuesday, May 14, 2013 - link

    I still don't get, why GigaByte perpetually insists on adding VGA D-Sub headers to the I/O-Panel. That interface is so obsolete, it's a complete joke, and cutting back on USB 2 headers is the result. DP and HDMI are nice to have, there's a case for DVI, in case you want to dual-screen, but VGA is just not used anymore. Even budget TFTs should be coming with only digital inputs by now.

    It's interesting to see, that the Creative solution is clearly targeted at 48kHz usage, with results getting worse, at higher sampling rates.

    When the M3 first was announced, I was excited, because finally there was a rival to the Gene series. But this first iteration is (spec-wise and price-wise) simply not in the same league.

    The placement of the second x8 PCIe is the only thing that's good about it, as you probably won't run two big GPUs in a micro-ATX case, hence by putting it down there, the option remains for big cases, and in small cases there's more PCIe bandwidth available.
    The downside is, that you cannot install a big card in the second PCIe, if a combination of large coolers blocks the first PCIe slot.
  • Ilias78 - Tuesday, May 14, 2013 - link

    Always the same story with Ian: Loves Asus motherboards, while dissing every other brand...
  • just4U - Tuesday, May 14, 2013 - link

    Currently the M3 is my board of choice. I pick it over the Asus variant every time (if in stock) It's $50 cheaper than the Maximus V Gene (here in Calgary) and I like the fact that they didn't cheap out on the sound option yet still include the Intel Nic. It hits in all the right areas.

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