A solid option is the B450M PRO with a compatible 3rd gen Ryzen processor, ensuring no BIOS update is required.
A solid option is the B450M PRO with a compatible 3rd gen Ryzen processor, ensuring no BIOS update is required.
MSI models with maximum support for the 3rd generation are available, meaning three of the boards linked are designed for MSI's specifications.
This model includes support for Ryzen 3000 series processors. You can refresh the BIOS by transferring a USB drive, inserting it into a free USB port, and pressing the BIOS flash button located on the rear IO panel.
I would steer clear of MSI motherboards due to my previous experience. Last year I bought a new MSI Z370 ITX board and accidentally damaged two 16GB RAM kits. MSI refused to replace the RAM, insisting I send it back so they could inspect the damage. Instead of swapping it out, they offered a refurbished version. That’s why I’ve stayed away from MSI ever since.
I own MSI boards, which are solid choices. I've played custom PC games for years. This might be a BIOS issue or a result of limited knowledge causing problems. Since it's an AMD thread, and you're sharing your frustration about using an Intel board, it seems like a straightforward setup.
The memory slot appears to have caused the RAM failure, though the exact cause remains unclear. After installing a new RAM package, the system wouldn't power on. Swapping modules didn’t help. Using a verified working RAM set produced the same issue, and removing individual modules revealed that taking the faulty one out restored booting. Moving it to the correct slot worked, but relocating it to the faulty slot prevented startup. Replacing it in the original working machine stopped the system from launching. The RAM that stayed in the bad slot still functioned, but the other three in that slot stopped working. It seems hardware defects are common—bad components are inevitable. A manufacturer should address customer concerns, but MSI dismissed my claim and refused to investigate whether their motherboard damaged the RAM. Instead of replacing the faulty board, they sent a refurbished one, which didn’t resolve the problem.
the sole deviation from the standard lineup is asrock's b450m/ac, essentially a pro4 version with Wi-Fi, yet since its release followed the launch of the 3000 series, it features a BIOS compatible with that lineup.