MSI Z170: Other Gaming Boards and Channel

MSI Z170A XPower Gaming Titanium Edition

Everyone remembers when MSI’s overclocking range of motherboards were yellow, right? Well how about if they turned a silvery gleam? Welcome to Skylake, because MSI has you covered.

The XPower Gaming Titanium Edition (XPGT for short) is one of those products trying to break new areas of aesthetics. Some will like it, some will not – as far as we can tell, the design itself has little effect on actual levels of performance, but this is an XPower part of the line-up, meaning it is MSI’s more overclocking (and extreme overclocking) focused model. As a result, and to go with the name, the power delivery uses many Titanium chokes, we get a potential 4-way CrossFire using CPU and PCH lanes, and the OC panel has changed a fair bit.

The OC Dashboard is designed to attach to the motherboard in the top right and give the OC buttons needed, such as power/reset, base frequency/multiplier adjustments, a full system reset, fast boot and a slow mode switch. For users that don’t need it, it should be able to be left off.

Along with the matching steel armor on the PCIe slots we get two M.2 slots which according to my schematics can both be used in PCIe 3.0 x4 mode at the same time, although each one will lose you two SATA ports. It seems slightly odd that these are all made dependent when Z170 has enough chipset lanes to go around, but this is what MSI has done.

USB 3.1 on the rear panel comes in the form of two Type-A ports from the ASMedia ASM1142 controller, while networking duties are form the Intel I219-V and audio is an enhanced Realtek ALC1150 solution.

Pricing for the XPGT is set for £240, or $310 in the US.

MSI Z170A Krait Gaming

The Krait line from MSI initially started as just a simple white on black theme, but then somehow developed a following, a snake head logo and now gets merged into MSI’s Gaming line like everything else. Typically the Krait name is reserved for a cheaper ATX motherboard that supports SLI, and here we have that without USB 3.1 and only two video outputs. There is an M.2 slot that runs in PCIe 3.0 x4 mode, as well as an Intel I219-V network controller and a Realtek ALC1150 audio codec.

Pricing for the Z170 Krait Gaming should come in at £125/$162.

MSI Z170A-G45 Gaming – image from TechPowerUp

The Z170A-G45 Gaming is actually a minor variant on the Gaming M5 with a slightly different arrangement for the voltage read points and a single USB 3.1-C rather than two USB 3.1-A ports. The G45 version also seems to have a VGA on the rear panel, but apart from that it looks pretty much the same from a design standpoint.

The M5 was set around $195, so I’d imagine this to be similar.

MSI Z170A-G43

We saw the Z170A-G43 at Computex, which (like the G45 seems) to be a slight variant from the Gaming M line. This time the G43 seems to align with the M3 with a slightly different SATA arrangement, a different aesthetic, and I’d imagine given the design it should be using either the Intel I219-V or the Realtek network ports. Similar to the previous board, the G45 also seems to be equipped with a VGA port but similar to the M3, this board does not seem to support SLI giving a single PCIe 3.0 x16 from the CPU and then a PCIe 3.0 x4 from the chipset.

MSI Z170A PC Mate

MSI’s PC Mate line is a little bit of an oddball here, not being given the Gaming name. That is because it sits more in that internet café style of system or bulk office ATX design. This means separate PS/2 connectors on the rear panel, the three most common VGA outputs, a single M.2 x4 slot, two USB 3.1-A ports on the rear (the ones on the right), a basic audio codec (looks like ALC892) and a Realtek network controller. The PC Mate motherboard, despite being in the Z170 level of motherboards, is more designed to make a non-overclocking CPU happy with a set of basic functionality to satisfy users who don’t actually own the PC they are working on.

MSI Z170: Gaming MX Range GIGABYTE Z170: Gaming ATX
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  • AndyTri - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    In the specifications it states: M.2, SATA and SATAe ports maximum support 1x M.2_PCIe + 6x SATAs or 1x M.2_SATA + 1x M.2_PCIe + 4x SATAs. Please refer to page 19 for
    M.2 slots with examples of various combination possibilities. On page 19 however it gives a lot more configuration options including 2x M.2_PCIe + 4x SATAs
  • althaz - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    I'm tempted by the Skylake i7 and the Asus Z170-Deluxe, but I need to see some real motherboard reviews first. Obviously that's not exactly feasible for this sort of thing where many motherboards are released all at once - but hopefully those reviews are coming :).

    Especially those POST tests, it's silly, but they make a huge impact on my purchasing decisions.
  • Ian Cutress - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    Hopefully I'll squeeze one or two out before IDF. Pretty sure five or six samples arrived in the run up to launch, I need to open a few boxes.
  • meacupla - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    I guess we're going to be waiting a while for MSI mITX and mATX boards to show up?

    Currently, there's only one mATX board that supports SLI, and it's a super expensive one from Asus.
  • sweeper765 - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    Do you still lose sata ports when using m.2?
  • Mikemk - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    What is SSIC?
  • mrlithium - Friday, August 7, 2015 - link

    "Super Speed Inter Chip", A standard concerned with low power, and signaling between chips on the motherboard, while still using USB 3.0 drivers. Something for motherboard makers to be concerned with.

    http://www.design-reuse.com/articles/34710/low-pow...
  • trsqd - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    Am I the only one here dreaming of a Mini-ATX board with a Xeon ( I know there's none yet for 1151, but think of Xeon-D ) or i5/7 with Iris Pro graphics ( not everyone is a hardcore gamer ) , with at least 2x M.2 (x4) slots ( imagine SM951 in Raid 0 ) and which can take at least 64GB RAM ? It would be my dream machine...what an amazing host that would be. Or even an Intel NUC with 2xM.2...
  • maofthnun - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    Does anyone know if any of these boards support vt-d? Or is it only gonna be Q170?
  • sweeper765 - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    Asus Z170-A question:
    If i populate the M.2 slot with pcie ssd would that consume any of the regular sata ports?
    Manual says m.2 is shared with sata express but what about the 2 sata ports? Can they be used with m.2 at the same time?

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