Despite being a relatively small company, EVGA have a very loyal following – the EVGA forums are full of like minded EVGA enthusiasts who enjoy the product range, particularly their graphics cards and motherboards.  EVGA are often a little late to the market with a motherboard for the latest chipset due to their size or for extra planning, especially when they also build monster consumer products such as the EVGA SR-2 and SR-X, both dual socket products geared for performance.  As part of this roundup, we have EVGA’s only Z77 motherboard on the market at the minute, the Z77 FTW.

EVGA Z77 FTW Overview

FTW is a fairly common internet acronym to mean ‘for the win’, and this is EVGA’s philosophy for a lot of their products, which are ultimately sold to gamers and overclockers.  The EVGA Z77 FTW is a good looking board, with some extra features such as dual 8-pin CPU power connectors, an extra SATA controller, dual GbE network ports, PCIe disabling buttons, triple BIOS functionality and the PLX PEX 8747 chip, but not a lot else.  EVGA’s tactic is the way their PLX chip is routed through the system, as shown by the diagram below:

Unlike other motherboards in this review, here we have eight lanes from the CPU going direct to the first PCIe slot, and the other eight go to the PLX via a multiplexer.  If the PLX is in operation the multiplexer sends the second set of eight lanes to the PLX, otherwise it remains full bandwidth to the first PCIe.  This results in the PLX having only 8 lanes worth of bandwidth upstream while providing 32 lanes downstream, a potential bottleneck. 

In full four-GPU mode, this gives us x8/x16/x8/x8, technically a higher lane count overall, but these last three PCIe slots are limited to a total 8 lanes upstream bandwidth.  EVGA state that this is not really an issue in gaming, as most communication between GPUs is via the SLI / CFX bridges, and that this setup should prove more beneficial to single GPU gamers than other PLX chip users.

My argument is that while it does increase single GPU bandwidth to non-PLX boards, single GPU users are ending up paying another $40 BOM cost for the PLX which they are not going to use?  EVGA have informed me via email that the solution used by other manufacturers will always be worse in gaming for single and to a smaller extent dual GPU users compared to their solution above. 

Unfortunately testing this hypothesis is a little distorted.  The EVGA Z77 FTW unfortunately did not like my memory testing kit for these reviews, a G.Skill 16GB DDR3-2400 9-11-11 memory kit.  Like the Biostar TZ77XE4 I reviewed a little while ago, and the ECS Z77H2-AX tested in this roundup, we had to run the memory at a slightly reduced setting, as neither the XMP nor automatic settings wanted to engage properly.  As such, we were limited to DDR3-2000 9-11-11.  Truth be told, this did not affect the results to a large degree, but the EVGA Z77 FTW also lacks MultiCore Enhancement, a ‘feature’ used by other manufacturers to run at 200 MHz more during full CPU loading.  This double setback means that in certain circumstances, the EVGA might not perform as expected.

This is shown in our throughput benchmarks, where the EVGA is sometimes lingering to hold on to the rest of the pack.  In contrast, our overclocking was quite good, with the EVGA Z77 FTW performing very well indeed.  Users wanting an overclock beyond 4.6 GHz will have to adjust more options than on other boards, but the headroom is there as long as the CPU and cooling you are using can handle the temperatures.

EVGA software is limited, in that we only have EVGA ELEET at our disposal, and users will have to register on EVGA’s website to download the latest version.  Unlike other boards in this price segment, we do not get WiFi functionality, mSATA, DVI/HDMI output, a graphical easy-to-understand BIOS, better-than-Realtek audio, or any small number of these, which puts EVGA down on the bang-for-buck impact.  But for the money, there is a lot in the box, and EVGA warranty is direct with them rather than the retailer.

Update: EVGA state that the Z77 FTW will feature MultiCore Enhancement in a future BIOS update.

Visual Inspection

The first aspect a user may notice, aside from the fact this board is in an E-ATX form factor rather than ATX, is how relatively empty the CPU socket area feels.  We have one large heatsink to the left, but it is outside the standard Intel specifications for socket area.  EVGA clearly envisage users with large air coolers will be running this board, perhaps with a distinctive overclock.  To top it off, there is also a pair of 8-pin CPU power connectors, for extreme overclockers to give the CPU more power.

The socket area has access to four of the six fan headers on board – one 4-pin behind the IO panel at the top, one 4-pin just above the PCIe slots, the main CPU 4-pin beside the CPU power connectors, and another 4-pin at the top right of the motherboard.  The other two fan headers, also both 4-pin, are found on the bottom of the board.

The memory slots use a single sided latch design, for easy insertion and removal (especially when space for hands is at a premium).  Down the right hand side of the motherboard, EVGA start with a pair of power and reset buttons, with a ClearCMOS red button above followed by a two-digit debug display below.  While not anything special when the motherboard is in a gaming rig, they do aid reviewers, extreme overclockers, and diagnosing faults alike.  All the two-digit error codes are printed in the EVGA manual, and after boot this display doubles as a CPU temperature readout.

Underneath these, we find the 24-pin ATX power connector with an attachment to allow users to connect the cable parallel with the board.  EVGA clearly have had requests from users for this, though I struggle to determine which market wants this – for users who will use this product inside a case, this provides them with the requirement for even more horizontal space to connect the cable.  For overclockers, it would allow the 24-pin connector to remain out of the way. 

Going further down the right hand side, we have a JLCM header (presumably for EVGA diagnostics), a fan header in use by the chipset fan, and a series of PCIe disable switches.  While not useful for the majority of users, these switches completely disable various PCIe slots to ensure that bandwidth is maximized to certain PCIe slots or for stability under sub-zero overclocking when not in use.  The SATA ports are color coded, such that from the top we have two SATA 6 Gbps in red from a Marvell controller, two more SATA 6 Gbps in red from the chipset, and four SATA 3 Gbps in black also from the chipset.

One of EVGA’s main features is the triple BIOS system, which is located on the bottom right of the motherboard. Two of these BIOS chips are fixed to the board and the third is placed such that it is easy to remove and replace should a user ever scramble all three BIOSes at once.  The onboard switch nearby helps to select between these BIOSes, and nearby there are also headers to switch the board into ‘dark mode’ (that is turning off all the LEDs).

On the south side of the board is our header array – two USB 2.0 headers, an IEEE1394 (FireWire) header, a USB 3.0 header and two fan outputs.  Many of these headers are designed to work with the packaged rear brackets that come with the board, and by default these headers have rubberized protectors on them to prevent damage.  On the far left of this board is a 6-pin PCIe power connector, to supply more power to the PCIe devices.  Many of these headers can be compromised by a GPU in the fourth slot though.

The PCIe slots are designed such that GPUs are to be placed in slots 1, 2, 4 and 5; however any combination will work depending on the size of the cooler.  In order to use any of the PCIe slots beyond the first however, power needs to be supplied either by the 6-pin PCIe power connector at the top of the PCIe, or at the bottom, or both if even more power is required for overclocking.  This means that a user with a standard 4-GPU setup with each GPU requiring two 6-pin connectors, a total of 10 6-pin PCIe connectors is required, so choose a power supply wisely from the beginning.  For our 4-GPU testing, I have two PSUs on hand to provide the power, and I was still stretching cables to get everything to fit.

The rear panel is full of USB connections, as EVGA have decided to forgo any serious attempt at providing video outputs on the Z77 platform.  From left to right we have two USB 2.0, a ClearCMOS button, a keyboard PS/2 port, four more USB 2.0 in black, two eSATA ports, dual GbE (Marvell), four USB 3.0 in blue, a DisplayPort connector (not to be confused with Thunderbolt), audio jacks and S/PDIF output.  The DP connector would make sense if the board was bundled with a DP->HDMI connector (as a matter of personal preference as I have no DP monitors).

Board Features

EVGA Z77 FTW
Price Link
Size ATX
CPU Interface LGA-1155
Chipset Intel Z77
Memory Slots Four DIMMs, Supporting up to 32GB DDR3
1066-2133+ MHz, Non-ECC
Video Outputs DisplayPort
Onboard LAN Dual Marvell 88E8057
Onboard Audio Realtek ALC889
Expansion Slots 1 x PCIe 3.0 x16 (x8 if any other PCIe slot populated)
2 x PCIe 3.0 x16 (x8 if slot underneath is populated)
2 x PCIe 3.0 x8
1 x PCIe 2.0 x1
Onboard SATA/RAID 2 x SATA 6 Gbps (Intel), Supports RAID 0, 1, 5, 10
4 x SATA 3 Gbps (Intel), Supports RAID 0, 1, 5, 10
2 x SATA 6 Gbps (Marvell), Supports RAID 0, 1
USB 4 x USB 3.0 (Intel) [2 onboard, 2 back panel]
2 x USB 3.0 (Marvell) [2 back panel]
10 x USB 2.0 (Intel) [4 onboard, 6 back panel]
Onboard 4 x SATA 6 Gbps
4 x SATA 3 Gbps
6 x Fan Headers
1 x USB 3.0 Header
2 x USB 2.0 Headers
1 x IEEE1394 Header
Power/Reset Buttons
Clear CMOS Button
Two-digit Debug
BIOS Switch
Power Connectors 1 x 24-pin ATX Power Connector
2 x 8-pin CPU Power Connectors
2 x 6-pin PCIe Power Connectors
Fan Headers 1 x CPU (4-pin)
1 x AUX (4-pin)
1 x CHA (4-pin)
3 x SYS (4-pin)
IO Panel 6 x USB 2.0
4 x USB 3.0
2 x eSATA
1 x PS/2 Keyboard Port
2 x GbE
1 x ClearCMOS
1 x DisplayPort
1 x SPDIF Output
Audio Jacks
Warranty Period 3 Years
Product Page Link

The EVGA Z77 FTW has plenty of USB connectivity, with ten USB 2.0 ports and six USB 3.0 ports available, coupled alongside dual network ports, and six fan headers.  Overclockers get the PCIe disable switches and dual 8-pin CPU power connectors, as well as the BIOS switch.  However it does feature a lack of video outputs (DP only) compared the other motherboards, as well as the worst audio codec (Realtek ALC889) in comparison.

ECS Z77H2-AX Overclocking EVGA Z77 FTW BIOS
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  • ultimatex - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    I got this MOBO from Newegg the first day they had it available , I couldn't believe the price since it offered 8x8x8x8x , Picked it up the first day and havent looked back. Doesnt look as cool as the Asrock extreme9 but it still looks good. Awesome Job Gygabyte , Anandtech should have given them a Gold not bronze though since the fan issue is a minor issue.
  • Arbie - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    For gaming, at least, how many people are really going to build a 2xGPU system? Let alone 3x or 4x. The are so few PC games that can use anything more than one strong card AND are worth playing for more than 10 minutes. I actually don't know of any such games, but tastes differ. And some folks will have multi-monitor setups, and possibly need two cards. But overall I'd think the target audience for these mobos is extremely small.

    Maybe for scientific computing?
  • Belard - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    Yep.... considering that most AAA PC games are just ports from consoles... having 3-4 GPUs is pointless. The returns get worse after the first 2 cards.

    Only those with 2~6 monitors can benefit with 2-3 cards.

    Also, even $80 Gigabyte boards will do 8x x 8x SLI/CF just fine.

    But hey, someone wants to spend $300 on a board... more power to them.
  • cmdrdredd - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    "Only those with 2~6 monitors can benefit with 2-3 cards."

    Oh really? 2560x1440 on a single card is garbage in my view. I am not happy with 50fps average.
  • rarson - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    If you're going multi-GPU on a single monitor, you're wasting money.
  • Sabresiberian - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    Because everyone should build to your standards, O god of all things computer.

    Do some reading; get a clue.
  • Steveymoo - Thursday, August 23, 2012 - link

    Incorrect.

    If you have a 120hz monitor, 2 GPUs make a tonne of difference. Before you come back with a "no one can see 120hz" jibe. That is also incorrect.... My eyes have orgasms every once in a while when you get those ultra detail 100+ fps moments in battlefield, that look great!
  • von Krupp - Friday, August 24, 2012 - link

    No. Metro 2033 is not happy at 2560x1440 with just a single HD 7970, and neither are Battlefield 3 or Crysis. The Total War series also crawls at maximum settings.

    I bought the U2711 specifically to take advantage of two cards (and for accurate colours, mind you). I have a distaste for multi-monitor gaming and will continue to have such as long as they keep making bezels on monitors.

    So please, don't go claiming that multi-card is useless on a single monitor because that just isn't true.
  • swing848 - Monday, December 8, 2014 - link

    At this date, December 2014, with maximum eye candy turned on, there are games that drop a refrence AMD R9 290 below 60 fps on a single monitor at 1920x1080 [using an Intel i5-3570K at 4GHz to 4.2GHz]
  • Sabresiberian - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    This is not 1998, there are many games built for the PC only, and even previously console-oriented publishers aren't just making ports for the PC, they are developing their games to take advantage of the goodness only PCs can bring to the table. Despite what console fanboys continue to spew, PC gaming is on the rise, and console gaming is on the relative decline.

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