Testseek.com have collected 77 expert reviews of the MSI Z87 MPower Max and the average rating is 88%. Scroll down and see all reviews for MSI Z87 MPower Max.
September 2013
(88%)
77 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Onboard mSATA connector, Low-profile Mpower heatsinks ease installation of large coolers, Generous in-box accessory mix, Robust overclocking features
Top x1 slot nearly blocked by heatsink, A few features seem superfluous
MSI’s MPower Max is an overclocker’s dream board for Intel 4th-Gen "Haswell" CPUs, with excellent features and accessories at a lower price than some competing boards. ...
I have always liked MSI's UEFI Click BIOS and said in previous reviews it's one of the best looking. The layout is logical and user friendly with all the basics and tons more advanced options to play with. As mentioned above, please be careful with the ...
Crossfire and SLI ready, Sound Blaster Cinema Audio, Click BIOS IV, 10 USB 3.0 ports, OC Genie, Dual BIOS protection, Solid capacitors and SFC Chokes, PCIE Gen 3.0, Killer E2205 Gigabit LAN, 3000MHZ (OC) DDR3 support, Onboard buttons for power and direct
Some minor bugs with MSI Command Center software
Even though the MPOWER MAX is primarily designed as an overclocking mainboard, MSI nonetheless designed it to have “fun” features for those who will not strictly use it to break world records. There are plenty of extra USB 3.0 connections beyond the six...
The 8 SATA ports are very sweet: all SATA 6 Gb/s ports. Next to that the KillerNIC Ethernet interface is something we love. You get 7.1 channel HD audio as delivered by the high-end Realtek ALC1150 codec, and in conjunction with a TI OPA1652 amplifier yo...
Big and bad. More SATA 6G and USB 3.0 ports than anyone could actually use, Improved ClickBIOS 4 is more informative and easier to use then previous MSI efforts, Button panel, POST code readout, OC Genie, mSATA connector, et cetera, Very good bundle of Windows utilities, Killer NIC and excellent audio, WiFi and Bluetooth included,
What, only four fan headers?, Active cooling would be nice on this class of board, No documentation on PCIE lane allocation.
I don't think there's any compelling reason to move from an Ivy Bridge or even a Sandy Bridge based system to a Haswell system-- there simply isn't enough performance and feature differential to justify it. On the other hand, if you're building a new ...
Was this review helpful?
Award
(94%)
Published: 2013-05-22, Author: Ian , review by: anandtech.com
Abstract: With time quickly approaching the launch of Haswell, leaks on both motherboards and CPU performance are coming out of the woodworks. Similar to our advance Ivy Bridge coverage, here is a current roundup of everything we were allowed to show or is currentl...
Coming in at $259.99 at the time of writing, the MSI MPOWER MAX is cheaper than you'd actually think. Considering the features that are offered on the board, along with the out of the box performance, we really thought that it would cost a little more, l...
The Z87 MPower MAX is a motherboard of many facets, one which targets experienced enthusiasts but will also draw in first-time overclockers. This approach ultimately succeeds in its goals by offering a well-rounded experience provided you’re willing to...
Overclocking, Stability, Click BIOS 4, Military Class IV, VCheck points, Audio Boost sound, Memory OC, Software suite, Massive accessory bundle
None
Looking at overall performance you can see the variation between boards does not differ by much when all else is equal. That in itself is a testament to the repeatability of the platform as it delivers that comparable performance from board to board. Kind...
Abstract: In our comparison tables, meanwhile you find benchmark values regarding 43 recent Z97 and Z87 motherboards. Furthermore we do not comment the benchmark values. The idea and also the goal is to present to you a market overview which helps you choose the ri...