MSI Z97A Gaming 6 Conclusion

The motherboard market is in an odd place right now. USB 3.1 is facilitating second revisions of the Z97 product line at roughly the same time that socketed Broadwell is launched, although the interest in Broadwell has been rather muted due to a lack of stock, a lack of a top end CPU (Broadwell tops at 65W, Haswell at 88W) and the promise of a new Intel mainstream platform by the end of the year. Couple this to the lack of USB 3.1 devices in the market, and there are no significant drivers for motherboard sales right now. One can point to a large selection of system integrators that build gaming PCs as a good source of output, although one might argue that they are feeling the same effects, especially if their clients follow the industry in any particular way.

Despite these factors, perhaps not producing a second revision USB 3.1 equipped motherboard would certainly be a bad idea. It all comes back to Game Theory - if no-one has a product in the market with the new feature, no-one loses out. But the minute one person does so, the rest have to follow suit in order to act as potential avenues of sales or even the perception of presence in the market in order to be seen as a leading brand. As a result, everyone jumps on board and we get an array of motherboards focusing on USB 3.1 as the main selling point, rather than initial out-of-the-box Broadwell CPU support being the selling point.

The economics and foibles of the motherboard industry aside, the Z97A Gaming 6 attacks the market at $160, arguably quite cheap for a Gaming 6 model. If we consider where other motherboards were at the time of their release, this was the point of the Gaming 5 and the Gaming 7 would be nearer $200. To that end, the Gaming 6 here is the gaming version of the cheap overclocking motherboard - designed to present an inexpensive route into MSI's high end features.

Aside from the USB 3.1 mentioned before, the Z97A Gaming 6 comes with 3x Crossfire and 2x SLI support (2x SLI has conditions) for multi-GPU gaming, a combination SATA/PCIe 10Gbps M.2 port (PCIe 2.0 x2), a gaming-focused Killer E2205 network port, SATA Express, an upgraded ALC1150 audio codec, six SATA 6 Gbps ports and six USB 3.0 ports. As an interesting aside, we also get voltage check points for extreme overclockers to read voltages directly rather than relying on software readouts, perhaps showcasing an element to that cheaper overclocking route. A couple of the USB ports are also under MSI's USB Power, allowing for consistent 5V output to avoid poor SNR with USB DACs.

The BIOS and software packages both have good points and bad points, similar to other MSI Z97 motherboards. The use of an XMP button in the BIOS should help more users enable this feature easier, along with the interactive fan controls and the Board Explorer for easier problem diagnosis. The BIOS still lacks an easy mode however, which is perhaps a barrier to new users. The software side of the equation sits on Live Update 6, the best auto-update software system for a motherboard compared to any other manufacturers' solution. A downside is the voltage overclocking in Command Center which visibly offers 2.1 volts to be applied over the CPU, which is more extreme than any liquid nitrogen world record attempt. A lower value, say 1.3 volts, and an option to extend the range by agreeing to a popup explaining the risks, would be eminently superior.

For performance, the Z97A Gaming 6 gets the honor of being the first Z97 motherboard through our new gaming tests, which means as a result it comes first out of one. The CPU and system side of the testing is the same as before, showing that the Gaming 6 implements multi-core turbo on our CPU by default and performs in the top half of most of the CPU benchmarks. The idle power consumption of our system was a good note, coming in the lower end, but the peak power consumption flipped the perspective. DPC Latency hit at 55, which is essentially the target for the Z97 platform, and the ALC1150 audio codec results were also ballpark. POST times of around 13 seconds or 12 stripped were slightly higher than other motherboards we've tested.

At $160, the MSI Z97A Gaming 6 sits with the hardware at roughly where we would expect a $160 motherboard to be this far in the cycle. It comes with a good amount of options, while the gaming focused design, such as a black PCB coating and reducing the white lines, helps the aesthetic as a whole. SATA and USB 3.0 are as you would expect at this price point, and the PCIe layout allows multi-GPU combinations, focusing more on 3x CFX support more than 2xSLI + another PCIe x2 card. The M.2 slot supports SATA and PCIe, with PCIe 2.0 x2 being the norm at this price, rather than a full PCIe 3.0 x4 which would have other complications with the graphics.  The choice of going USB 3.1 Type-C only is perhaps a concern though, depending on how quickly devices come to market or if a user might upgrade the motherboard before devices become mainstream.

When buying PC components, WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) ensures the customer knows what they are getting. MSI's Z97A Gaming 6 at $160 is a good example of this - you get what you expect and there are relatively few hidden surprises.

Gaming Performance 2015
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  • ct909 - Friday, July 24, 2015 - link

    MSI are already publishing teaser images of their upcoming Z170A (Skylake ChipSet) Gaming MB, on their Facebook page:

    www.facebook.com/MSIHQFANCLUB/photos/a.190232534331918.41259.123693947652444/964188970269600
  • wintermute000 - Saturday, July 25, 2015 - link

    pretty much... not sure why reviewing Z97 boards now!?!?!
  • DanNeely - Friday, July 24, 2015 - link

    The ASM 1142 controller supports two USB 3.1 ports; I'm baffled at the decision to only offer one.

    http://www.asmedia.com.tw/eng/e_show_products.php?...
  • sonny73n - Friday, July 24, 2015 - link

    We got a pretty good review on the ASUS TUF X99 a few days ago. Thanks AT, for this review too.

    By the way, wouldn't it be better if AT do a review with at least 3 - 4 boards in the same price range so we can get a good comparison on their performances?

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