Final Words

Those users looking for a Mini-ITX board know that the small size of the boards make for compact, efficient builds; but they also come with some trade-offs to get to their petite size. It is up to the board makers, in turn, to determine what and how many features can be applied to such a small amount of space, to reach the best and most useful combination of features. To that end, while we do not have two M.2 slots (as the SuperO and ASUS Z370I board do), the board is laid out well and includes features other boards may not include. In this case, the MSI Z370I Gaming Pro Carbon AC and the SuperO C7Z370-CG-IW are the only Z370 based Mini-ITX size board which includes USB 3.1 (10 Gbps) ports on the rear I/O bracket.

Along with the USB 3.1 support, the MSI Z370I Gaming Pro Carbon AC includes the Realtek ALC1220 codec for audio, Intel networking (Wi-Fi and wired), four SATA ports and a single M.2 slot. When comparing this to a full-size board, just about the only thing missing are the additional PCIe and DRAM slots as well as another M.2 slot or two. MSI intended the board to be a small form-factor, gaming-centric board. Overall, MSI ended up with a well-rounded board able to excel at gaming as well as and be a good option for buyers in the Mini-ITX space.

As far as looks go, we know there isn't much one can do to the board and MSI chooses to let the RGB LEDs do the talking for the most part. The eight RGB LEDs line the underside of the board beneath the 24-pin power lead to the front panel USB 3.0 header illuminating under the board. The black aluminum heatsinks work well and provide a cool look with its carbon fiber accents. No Mini-ITX board will win beauty contests and in this case, the MSI board, while not a pageant queen, will not turn heads away with its styling.

About the only item I would like to see different on this board is to have an additional M.2 slot. These devices are becoming more and more popular and though there isn't a lot of real-estate, we've seen it done before on other boards. Outside of that, there isn't anything I would really change.

Overall performance on the Z370I Gaming Pro Carbon AC was solid, particularly with power use both at idle and under load, as well as POST times. Other performance results, including gaming, were in line with the other motherboards tested so far. Overclocking performance was also quite solid with the tiny little board having no issues matching larger boards.

MSI has brought to the table a solid little Mini-ITX board in the Z370I Gaming Pro Carbon AC. If you need USB 3.1 ports on the back panel, this and the SuperO are the only boards which should catch your eye. Board performance was right where it needed to be and overclocking abilities were right up there as well. There is plenty of connectivity on the SATA side of things as well as including a single M.2 slot. Overall, the MSI Z370I Gaming Pro Carbon AC brings a lot of features to the table in a small package and at a reasonable price of around $168. Only the GIGABYTE Mini-ITX board is less expensive, which makes the pricing very reasonable with the features it has. If users are in the market for a Mini-ITX size board, the Z370I Gaming Pro Carbon will be a solid choice to build your small-form-factor system around.

Other AnandTech Z370 Motherboard Reviews:

Overclocking with the i7-8700K
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  • eek2121 - Thursday, August 23, 2018 - link

    I would like to know how many people actually have multiple m.2 drives. I typically just install a single drive and if I need additional storage, fallback to SATA.

    I might have to pick up one of these and a Node 202 case or something for a small, compact gaming PC.
  • AdditionalPylons - Thursday, August 23, 2018 - link

    I bought the ASRock AB350M Pro4 specifically because it had two M.2 slots. (One supporting both PCIe and S-ATA and the other one only S-ATA.) This allows for one very fast system and application drive and one bigger and cheaper as video editing scratch disk. This keeps the number of cables lower. Airflow can probably be debated because on one hand M.2 drives may not get much air, but on the other hand S-ATA PCBs are enclosed and don't get much airflow either.
    Price-wise M.2 S-ATA drives are almost the same as 2.5" S-ATA drives. I wouldn't be surprised if M.2 got cheaper than S-ATA over time due to the size of the enclosure and packaging, but it's more likely mostly due to supply and demand.
  • katsetus - Thursday, August 23, 2018 - link

    In case of Node 202, the other m.2 slot would come in handy for expansion. I have the Asus z370i strix in it, and with a large gpu and non-modular psu, the hdd bracket would be a nuisance, and I am unsure if it would even fit. With storage-oriented (as compared to performance-oriented) nvme drives coming down in price, I would consider buying another nvme drive for expanded storage rather than a 2.5 inch ssd. At least in case of Node 202, that is.
  • Hxx - Thursday, August 23, 2018 - link

    m.2 drives have come down in price especially if you're going for a SATA m.2. Much more elegant, no cable clutter, and generally faster for a small price premium
  • DanNeely - Thursday, August 23, 2018 - link

    For people going with even smaller new SFF cases than you're co, there might not even be an HDD bay at all making it m.2 or MacGyver for solid state drives.
  • Gothmoth - Friday, August 24, 2018 - link

    i have 3 x 1TB drives. in my TR system.
  • Dug - Sunday, August 26, 2018 - link

    I use 2 m.2 drives and wish I could use three, but there would be a performance hit for doing so.
    1 for OS and all apps. 2nd for games and editing files. Sata drive for back up and photos.
  • NobodyYouKnow - Wednesday, August 29, 2018 - link

    I currently use 3 M.2 cards (2x PCIe M.2 & 1x Sata M.2) on the MSI Z370 Gaming Pro Carbon. Got 1 PCIe M.2 in the top slot, the sata M.2 in the bottom, and an older PCIe M.2 in a M.2 PCIe x4 add-in adapter card (Akasa AK-PCCM2P-01). The latter is in the bottom PCIe x8 slot.
    The plan is to buy a 1TB PCIe M.2 that will go in the bottom M.2 slot and move the sata M.2 in the Akasa adapter. The card currently in the adapter is not enough for my games but will work just fine in a htpc.
  • prateekprakash - Thursday, August 23, 2018 - link

    One query: is it possible to connect multiple headphones using the back audio jacks? ( Without using any splitter or external DAC, just those 3.5mm ports)
    I just need stereo audio through each headphones, nothing fancy...
  • DanNeely - Thursday, August 23, 2018 - link

    AFAIK no boards support this unless you've got a pair that can connect over the optical port (do these exist?). The various analog pins are to support separate location channels for surround sound, so if you plug in multiple headphones the audio controller will think you've got front, and center, or side, or etc speakers.

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