help me pick a mobo, help me better my life

magget

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Feb 14, 2012
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hello people, mabuhay! can you help me with this please..

i live here in the Philippine islands and prices differ here from other places.. im a gamer and i will be doing some decent amount of 3d software stuff.... after some googling, i came up with these available mobos here in my place that would suit well(not best, best is expensive) to my future 4770k cpu with their respective local prices...

Asus Z87 a - $188
GIGABYTE GA-Z87X-UD3H $197
Asus Z87 plus - $222 (theres a bundle with this and a 4770k which i could save $22)
Asus Z87 pro - $237

from these prices, can you guys tell me your opinions?
thank you in advance..
 

magget

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Feb 14, 2012
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i always see good reviews with pro. so if there wasnt any bundle where i could save that $22, how much do you think is the quality gap between plus and pro?
 
not that big, pro has better cpu power design which could help a bit in overclocking - not very big difference though. extra stuff it has onboard wifi, newer audio codec, and replaces the 2 old pci ports with pci ex 1x (but they are the slots next to the graphics which get covered by any dual slot card anyway)

it's definitely worth 15 usd but 37 is a bit too much to ask for these - unless you really need one feature from above.
 
All are great boards but since you have a stated prefernce for gaming, the boards I'd be looking at in this proce segment in order of preference

MSI Z87-GD-65
Asus Z87-Gene
Gigabyte Sniper
Asus Hero

Of the four, the MSI has been the best reviewed, setting various OC records, and usually has the best price

http://www.overclockersclub.com/reviews/msi_z87_gd65_gaming/12.htm

MSI has been using components that meet or exceed MIL-STD-810G for some time as part of its Military Class build philosophy. Parts such as Super Ferrite Chokes that run at up to 35 degree Celsius lower temperatures, have a 30% higher current handling capacity, and a 20% improvement in power efficiency; Tantalum filled Hi-C Caps that are are up to 93% efficient; and "Dark Capacitors" that feature Lower ESR and a ten-year lifespan all tied into a PCB with improved temperature and humidity protections as part of the "Military Essentials" package......In the end MSI's Z87-GD65 is a board that comes with an expansive feature set that includes all your basics and the extras that set them apart such as the V-Check points, upper end audio, Dual BIOS ROMs, KIller Network package, Military Class IV package, and a three-year warranty. Couple that with good looks that carry the dragon theme through the board, and you have a winning combination at $189.

http://www.overclock3d.net/reviews/cpu_mainboard/msi_z87_gd65_gaming_review/15

Now and again a motherboard appears that is so obviously brilliant, and so affordable, that we wonder if anything will be able to top it. For a while that crown was held by the ASUS Sabertooth, both in X58 and then P67 variants. Then MSI stole the crown with the Z77 MPower. Looking at the Z87 GD65 Gaming we think it's going to take something extraordinary to top it, such is the perfect storm of price, performance, features and looks.

The switch to Military Class 4 has given us an extremely ready overclocker too. You're always thermally limited when overclocking and the i7-4770K is one of the most demanding around. Considering the amount of cooling we're using we think that although the GD65 is capable of bringing 5GHz from our i7-4770K you'd need a proper water loop to make the most of it.

Performance is outstanding. The stock results were a particular highlight. We know a lot of people still just like to put their CPU in and go, without overclocking it first. Despite how easy it is these days we know that the fear factor still exists. So you'll be glad to know that the MSI Z87 GD65 Gaming really rocks hard even at stock settings. Naturally the overclocking is blistering too, with some OC3D records broken.

MSI have laid the gauntlet down to all the other manufacturers. Gorgeous to look at, blistering performance and all at a very affordable price, the MSI Z87 GD65 Gaming is not only the new benchmark for Z87 motherboards, but probably for all motherboards.

I've now done 5 builds with this board, and will I'm still using the Asus MVIF for the $300 price category, nothing else quite competes between $150 and $200.
 

Tradesman1

Legenda in Aeternum
With the 4770K, I'd go inbetween the Plus and the Pro and take a look at the Hero, best I've found so far and Asus seems to have the best handle on the Z87 and Haswell, I did 20 client builds before deciding on the Hero for my own -in sig. It's also the best selling and highest rated at the Egg of the better selling mobos