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MSI Z270 Motherboard Lineup Smiles for the Camera

btarunr

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A massive leak of marketing material gives us a peak into MSI's upcoming socket LGA1151 motherboard lineup based on Intel Z270 Express chipset, which will be launched alongside the 7th generation Core "Kaby Lake" processor family. The lineup begins with the Z270 PC Mate. This is likely the cheapest motherboard in the lineup, and gets you started on a cost-effective build. The board covers all the essentials, even if it's not designed for multi-GPU builds. Notice the 2x DVI connectors. This board could be priced closest to the $100 mark.

Next up, is the Z270 SLI Plus. This board could likely be priced in the neighborhood of $120-150, and is the cheapest board from the lineup that has NVIDIA SLI support. You get most of the features of the Z270 PC Mate, plus a stronger CPU VRM reinforced slots, a rear I/O shroud, 8-channel audio, and additional USB 3.1 ports. The Z270 Krait Gaming is a variant of this exact board, with a white+black color scheme, which could be sold at a $10-15 premium over the Z270 SLI Plus.



Moving up the ladder we have the Z270 Gaming Pro Carbon, which is in the thick of the lineup, with a price ranging between $160-180. You get the new M.2 Shield accessory, which cools M.2 SSDs, RGB LED lighting on the PCH and VRM heatsinks, with support for additional LED headers; an elaborate plastic shroud over the I/O shield, and a higher grade onboard audio. These two options also mean that the company could be doing away with the "Gaming M3," making the Gaming-M series a premium brand.



The Z270 Gaming M5 looks the most richly endowed among the long line of "Gaming 5" series motherboards by the company. A large metal shroud covers not just the rear I/O but also flows along the length of the board. You get U.2 ports in addition to a pair of M.2 slots with M.2 Shields; four USB 3.1 ports, and high-grade audio. Expect this board to be priced around $190-210. Leading the pack is the Z270 Gaming M7. Priced around $250, this board is packed to the brim with features, including three PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slots (likely using a bridge chip), the strongest CPU VRM in the lineup, 7-layer PCB, LED-lit VRM, PCH heatsinks, and plastic shrouds; three M.2 slots, two gigabit Ethernet interfaces, 802.11ad WLAN, and more. Last but not the least, is MSI's premium mini-ITX motherboard, the Z270I Gaming Pro Carbon AC. This feature-loaded compact board serves up M.2 slots (in the reverse side of the PCB), shielded PCIe and memory slots, 802.11ac WLAN, and four USB 3.1 ports.



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Good morning, I might be mistaken since english is not my native language, buy shouldn't it be peek instead of peak?

Best regards.
 
Looking sharp. Hopefully they'll do a Carbon version for the Zen's X370 chips. The RGB and M.2 shield add a good bit of nice touches.
 
great plain and simple design,
 
The gaming M5 looks like they cloned an Asus ROG board...
 
I'm drooling over that mITX Gaming Pro with DrMOS. If it has an m.2 slot on the backside it's perfect.
 
Has anyone asked if you can put a i7 6700k or an i5 6600k on this motherboard since it is the same socket? Also would there be any benefit to it if it is possible.
 
Nice find. Very interesting. I especially found it interesting that setting the clock speed on both cpus at 4.0Ghz showed the 7700k to be slower then the 6700k. But ya you answered my question. 6th gen cpus will work on a z270mb.

It would be nice if we could get some more reviewers to confirm those clock to clock tests though.
 
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Oh please, will it ever stop? Not talking about the RGB-lights, but of the general design language which can be seen EVERYWHERE since one or two years: diagonal lines! I really hate them. I want a clean, minimalistic design. Hardware for adults - not a toy! Are you serious by saying "great plain and simple design"?!

Rage.

Example for a "plain and simple design".
 
Nice find. Very interesting.

Z77/Z87 was the same way so I am not surprised.

Oh please, will it ever stop? Not talking about the RGB-lights, but of the general design language which can be seen EVERYWHERE since one or two years: diagonal lines! I really hate them. I want a clean, minimalistic design. Hardware for adults - not a toy! Are you serious by saying "great plain and simple design"?!

Rage.

Example for a "plain and simple design".

Asus workstation boards would be the items you are looking for.
 
Wondering which case supports usb 3.1 front panel right now. I would consider upgrading my case for that convinience.
 
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