Top choice board for Ryzen 7 7800X3D is the B550 or B650 socket with ample power delivery and cooling options.
Top choice board for Ryzen 7 7800X3D is the B550 or B650 socket with ample power delivery and cooling options.
Hey, I've spent hours trying to research this but every website has a different opinion, so I'm hoping the fine people at Linus can reach a semi-consensus. Here's the build: CPU: Ryzen 7 7800X3D GPU: Sapphire RX 7800 16GB RAM: Corsair 16GB PSU: Corsair 850W RM 1.5TB SSD (Two units) In terms of budget, I'm not a cheapskate but at the same time I only want to pay for what I need, which is a mobo that will handle the above with ease. Not interested in RGB or anything like that, and my only purpose is to game. Thanks in advance!
For basic needs, a standard B650 works well, while Gigabyte Gaming and Elite boards offer better overall value.
Gigabyte's B650 AUROS Pro AX stands out for its enhanced power output compared to the Elite AX while maintaining the same price point. If the gap in pricing becomes more noticeable, opting for the Elite AX makes sense. Generally, most B650 models won't offer significant performance improvements over their counterparts.
Consider a 32GB kit because the 8GB DDR5 sticks aren’t performing well. A 6000C30/32 or 6400C32 might be better unless the 3200C32 is cheaper. You’ll need to manually enable XMP for the 6000C30 but you’ll still get a reliable 10000+ capable Hynix die. This setup uses more M.2 slots and PCIe lanes, so think about getting just one 2TB SSD and partitioning it if you want OS and data separate. What’s your budget for the whole build? Do you have a specific motherboard budget in mind? What are the prices for the components and a part list? Also, what I/O features or requirements do you need on the motherboard? The B650M HDV is a solid baseline with 14 USB-A and 2 USB-C ports, capable of handling an overclocked 7950X. It supports DDR5 10000+ and can handle X3D overclocking, so unless you need more USB ports (which would mean a B650 LiveMixer), it’s not worth the extra cost.
Don't purchase this. Requires at least 2x16GB for DDR5; 8GB units function poorly. Corsair is probably the priciest and provides no advantages—consider alternatives.