MSI Z97 Gaming 5 Conclusion

A gaming based motherboard has to satisfy two main criteria. The first is the gaming aspect, by offering gaming oriented technology that people can use and feel comfortable using. The second is the experience, and making sure that users understand what is in their system and how it can be used to its full advantage without piling a multitude of jargon into the mix. The only other caveat to a gaming build is the price which ultimately dictates what extra features get added on and where in the product stack it sits.

MSI’s Z97 Gaming 5 sits above the Gaming 3 and below the Gaming 7/9 models, and thrown into that mix is the Z97M and Z97I Gaming models, some of which also come with 802.11ac WiFi. We have seen channel motherboards at $150 come with WiFi, but MSI takes that budget and invests in other features for the Gaming 5: A styled PCB and heatsinks, a Killer E2205 series network port, upgraded audio, an enhanced USB power for audio, six months of XSplit and a couple of in-the-box extras too. It is also nice to see M.2 support, with 22x42 to 22x80 sized devices supported. It seems odd that there is not a connection hole for 22x30 devices though.

The motherboard supports three-way PCIe 3.0 CrossfireX and two-way SLI, although if any PCIe device is used in the final slot then SLI is disabled due to the x8/x4/x4 arrangement. This is the compromise that motherboard manufacturers have to make compared to an x8/x8 with x4 from the chipset type of layout. Due to MSI’s layout, it also affords four separate PCIe 2.0 x1 slots for additional connectivity cards.

The Z97 Gaming 5 uses an aggressive form of MultiCore Turbo, meaning that the CPU benchmark results are all relatively high. This is combined with good scores in DPC Latency and idle power consumption. On the other side of the coin, audio results need an update to get the best results, the 14+ second POST times are longer than expected and USB speeds at the bottom of the charts.

When one is looking for a gaming based build, the aspirations are all at the high end. We are talking i7 processors with tons of memory and perhaps a couple of 980s thrown in for good measure, with super-fast SSDs and perhaps one or more high resolution, high refresh rate monitors. The reality for many is that gaming on a budget is a large part of the market. The Z97 Gaming 5 is middle of the road in terms of price point and feature set to appeal to the i3 or i5 gamers, perhaps enough to warrant a small bit of overclocking too. These builders might spend the biggest chunk of their budget on a GPU, a nice monitor or a large SSD, and do not tend to use other cards. While the Z97 Gaming 5 is not perfect for onboard audio and USB speeds, it does offer an interesting data point in this part of the spectrum.

For me, as a power user, I might have preferred another SATA cable or two in the box along with an Intel + Killer network port combination. MSI’s Z97 Gaming range unfortunately does not offer an Intel NIC at any point, which might be an oversight.

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  • Rock1m1 - Tuesday, October 7, 2014 - link

    As an owner of MSI Z87 - G43 Gaming MB, I really happy with the features and value I got with this.
  • jmke - Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - link

    with the latest BIOS (1.06 I think), if you have a coolermaster gaming mouse, you will get stuck at boot. Had me scratching my head to figure that one out. Set up system, all is well, update drivers, ok. Install latest BIOS: no boot. Reset bios: no boot.

    I'm not the only one, luckily somebody @ msi forums figured it out that it was his CM Storm mouse causing the issue, my CM Havoc disconnected, the system boots up as normal. On BIOS 1.05 there is no such issue.

    the Killer E2205 network software is crap, crashes randomly, uninstalled it after a few days.
  • just4U - Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - link

    I have purchased 5 different boards now in MSI's Z97 gaming lineup and am pleased with the overall results. I like the look of the boards and branding scheme and they all worked flawlessly. Nic and Sound options have been good really.. Not sure why some complain about the Atheros.
  • seattle13man - Saturday, December 13, 2014 - link

    If one is looking for a game machine, I noticed that Newegg had the ASRock Z97Extreme 6/ac for less than this motherboard. If you look at the fps you will see ASrock out performed it!
  • Will_rigby2 - Saturday, April 2, 2016 - link

    Would you say this motherboard is compatible with a i7 4790k cpu or do you recommend a different cpu for this particular model

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