X99 Conclusion

Back in the early 2000s, some motherboard manufacturers had trouble getting the basics to work. Fast forward ten years and the basics are easily pushed aside – motherboard manufacturers now end up attempting to differentiate with new features and the user experience. At some point, motherboard design becomes less about electrical engineering and more about psychological interaction between the user and the product. We end up saying ‘they all work out of the box, but it is the added bits that make or break the experience’.

X99 as a platform has been anticipated for a long while. Putting the fact that every user has access to six or eight cores aside, the fact that X79 has been around for so long and lacked the modern features means that some will happily upgrade despite the cost. We get a full set of SATA 6 Gbps ports, more USB 3.0 ports, Thunderbolt support, DDR4 and PCIe storage. X99 also brings the first motherboards with tri-antenna 802.11ac, which is exciting in itself. Haswell-E gives a chance for all the motherboard manufacturers to stretch their engineering departments into creating something new for the high end, and it is interesting to see which manufacturers grasp that opportunity.

From our reviews today, there exists three clear markets.

The ASUS X99-Deluxe is aimed at the i7-5960X buyer who wants everything and they want it today. By only releasing two motherboards for X99 launch, both $400 and up, ASUS clearly wants to make its mark on the high-end.

On the opposite side of the scale is the MSI X99S SLI Plus at $230, which wants to hoover up all the i7-5820K market for those limited on budget by providing something cheap but works well. Sure, it does not get the bells and whistles of the high end stuff aimed at gamers and overclockers, but it makes sense for some get-up and go.

In the middle, in that $280-$350 range, is somewhat of a no-man’s land. These motherboards have to offer something more than the base but cannot be too extravagant. For the ASRock X99 WS, this means workstation like features at a non-workstation like price. Unfortunately beyond RDIMM and ECC support, along with 1U height limitations, a vPro enabled NIC and large heatsinks, it feels uncharacteristic of ASRock by not having plenty of extra usable functionality for its price. The GIGABYTE X99-UD7 WiFi performs better by being at the top of the Ultra Durable line and playing around with M.2 WiFi, extra durability in the sockets and hole spacing, using USB 3.0 hubs to expand functionality without losing PCIe lanes and aiming at four-way graphics GPU setups up and down its product line. Then the sleeved SATA cables are a nice touch too.

Haswell-E is still young. The processors, X99 and DDR4 were eventually rushed to market due to a release date change which means that manufacturers are still playing around trying to optimize settings. This is exemplified most in rush to improve DRAM verification, with not all memory kits being verified on all motherboards as of yet. This comes in conjunction with some motherboards reporting issues with the high end kits resulting in BIOS updates coming thick and fast. For those users who want super fast memory, it might make sense to wait a month until this is all sorted out. X99 is not going anywhere soon.

In the end, the market for X99 is small in comparison to the mainstream market, but it does represent the consumer halo of awesome PCs and ultimate PC builds. The extreme processor platform will always be for the server crowd who demand performance, and it ends up being positive marketing for those who deal with the consumer cut-offs. The question to answer is this: we were as excited moving from X58 to X79, but we eventually got frustrated with X79 due to Z97's feature set. How long will it be before X99 feels old?

 

MSI X99S SLI Plus Conclusion
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  • The Von Matrices - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    Ian never said the MSI board wouldn't overclock, just that an unidentified bug causes its overclocked performance to be significantly lower than the other boards. based upon the results, putting your same CPU in the other boards would make it perform CPU 4.5% faster; alternatively, you would have to clock your CPU to 4.8GHz in the MSI board to match the 4.6GHz overclocks in the other boards.
  • woj666 - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    This review had the opposite result. The MSI board was able to perform even better than the others overclocked. It's disappointing but sometimes we just get bad boards.

    http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/2014/09/09/x99-mo...
  • The Von Matrices - Saturday, September 27, 2014 - link

    The bit-tech review has the CPU in the MSI board overclocked higher than the other boards, which would reasonably would make it perform better. The problem that Ian experienced is not that the board couldn't overclock the CPU; it's that at the same clock speed, the MSI board is significantly slower than its competitors, and the bit-tech results do not replicate Ian's circumstances since they have different overclocks on each CPU on each board.
  • just4U - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    From the article "I have had failures in the past (Bluetooth adaptor shorting out, DRAM or PCIe slots not working, PSU going BANG… twice) "

    ----

    I was half-cut trying to install ram at 4am.. in near darkness, the combination turned into a epic fail..
  • owcraftsman - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    Very unfair to MSI to select top of the line boards for the other manufacturers and a bottom of the stack from MSI. The SLI Plus is a value edition at best so spare me an explanation.
  • bigboxes - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    "Due to the way the motherboard manufacturers were sampling for X99, we were unable to align several motherboards of a similar price." If you had actually read the article you may have not come across as a love struck fanboy.
  • The_Assimilator - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    Apparently you failed to notice (no doubt because you didn't read the article) that the MSI was gicven a "Recommended" award. Explanation: you are a tool.
  • Laststop311 - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    Once again Asus is on top. Their bios is the best designed with the best features. It's why my x58 board is an asus rampage formula. I'm gonna stay with x58 tho rather get a 55" LG oled TV
  • The Von Matrices - Saturday, September 27, 2014 - link

    For the price of the ASUS board plus a 5820K CPU you could have any of the other boards plus a 5930K CPU, which would negate any performance advantage of the ASUS board. The ASUS board is only worth considering if price is no object, which from my experience seems to describe most LGA2011 buyers.
  • Dadunn1700 - Tuesday, August 25, 2015 - link

    Or u can save up for alittle while longer and get the Asus board AND the 5930k AND be faster yet again. Round and round we go. Although it's much easier to chg a CPU rather than a whole motherboard.

    Point is No matter what better is better....but not necessarily at the same price point. Tho I don't think $500 is a lot of money for enthusiasts to spend on PC parts. Especially essential ones. Being a flagship motherboard it's not exactly geared toward budget builders anyway....ie ppl concerned with performance per dollar. They want the best....period.

    Personally I don't think $500 is a lot of money myself for a part i probably won't be replacing anytime soon.

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