MSI MPG Z690 Edge WIFI DDR4 Motherboard Review: Affordable Enthusiast Bliss?

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The MSI Z690 Edge WIFI DDR4 hails from the MPG line of motherboards, in the middle of the company’s product stack. While it may not have all of the bells and whistles that some high-end MEG-class boards do, the MPG line (and the Edge WIFI) all come well-equipped and ready to take on whatever Alder Lake processors dish out, including our i9-12900K test chip.

The Z690 Edge WIFI DDR4 ($299.99) is at the bottom of the MPG series, with the Z690 Force WIFI and Z690 Carbon WIFI/Carbon EK X we reviewed above it. The board includes capable power delivery, loads of storage (including four M.2 sockets and six SATA ports) premium audio and network solutions, fast USB connectivity, and busy-but-good looks, all for $299.99. There isn’t much to not like here that isn’t subjective. If you want to use the latest and greatest in RAM (and pay a lot more for it), there’s a Z690 Edge WIFI DDR5 option for $329.99 as well. Tested performance on our Z690 Edge WIFI DDR4 was good all around, but especially in our Procyon/MS Office suite, where it recorded some of the highest values. The difference between DDR4 and DDR5 is apparent in the 7Zip compression tests and x264 benchmarks, but the board competes well with the other DDR4 models we’ve tested.

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The MSI Z690 Edge WIFI DDR4 hails from the MPG line of motherboards, in the middle of the company’s product stack. While it may not have all of the bells and whistles that some high-end MEG-class boards do, the MPG line (and the Edge WIFI) all come well-equipped and ready to take on whatever Alder Lake processors dish out, including our i9-12900K test chip.

The Z690 Edge WIFI DDR4 ($299.99) is at the bottom of the MPG series, with the Z690 Force WIFI and Z690 Carbon WIFI/Carbon EK X we reviewed above it. The board includes capable power delivery, loads of storage (including four M.2 sockets and six SATA ports) premium audio and network solutions, fast USB connectivity, and busy-but-good looks, all for $299.99. There isn’t much to not like here that isn’t subjective. If you want to use the latest and greatest in RAM (and pay a lot more for it), there’s a Z690 Edge WIFI DDR5 option for $329.99 as well.

Tested performance on our Z690 Edge WIFI DDR4 was good all around, but especially in our Procyon/MS Office suite, where it recorded some of the highest values. The difference between DDR4 and DDR5 is apparent in the 7Zip compression tests and x264 benchmarks, but the board competes well with the other DDR4 models we’ve tested.

Performance testing while gaming was spot on as well. In short, you’d be hard-pressed to notice a difference between this board and the others we’ve tested.

Let's look at the MSI MPG Z690 Edge WIFI DDR4 features and performance in more detail and see if this $300 motherboard has a chance to make our best motherboards list.

Looking closely at the board, we see a jet black PCB along with heatsinks and shrouds that cover quite a bit of the surface. All of these are a lighter black compared to the board. The dot-matrix styling makes the board look busy to me. There are large heatsinks with plenty of cutouts and surface area that cover the VRMs. This is also where we find the first RGB element: The MSI Dragon is lit up from below, illuminating the branding. The second RGB area, located under the chipset heatsink, lights up the bottom part of the board. Overall, the MPG Z690 Edge WIFI DDR4 looks good, though the busy nature of the design could drive some builders away.

Starting with the top half of the board, we get a closer look at the large heatpipe-connected heatsinks to cool the power delivery. On top, the MSI dragon RGBs are saturated and colorful, while not being too bright and overwhelming. The board gives off a glow that lights up the inside of your case, but does not make it the center of attention. Just above the heatsinks, we spot two 8-pin EPS power connectors (one required) to power the processor.

Moving past the socket, we run into four unreinforced DRAM slots, which lock the RAM down from both ends. MSI lists support on this DDR4 board up to 5200+ MHz (with one DIMM per channel and one rank) and capacity up to 128GB. Regarding memory speed, your mileage may vary as it depends on the memory kit and the processor’s IMC to reach such speeds. We didn’t run into any issues with our DDR4-3600 or DDR4-4000 kits during testing and, there’s still more headroom available.

Above the DRAM slots are 4-pin fan headers and RGB headers. In this location, there are CPU_FAN1 and PUMP_FAN1 headers, plus six others on the board for a total of eight. All headers support both PWM and DC-controlled fans. CPU_FAN1 defaults to auto control and outputs up to 2A/24W. PUMP_FAN1 defaults to PWM mode and outputs up to 3A/36W, while the SYS_FAN1-6 headers default to DC mode and output 1A/12W. There are plenty of headers and power to support your cooling ecosystem through the board. You can control the fans through the BIOS as well as MSI’s Center software.

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Next to the CPU and PUMP fan headers are two RGB headers. There are two 3-pin ARGB headers here, while on the bottom edge of the board is a 4-pin RGB and a third 3-pin ARGB. If the RGB lighting on the board isn’t enough, use these to light up your chassis and MSI’s Mystic Light software to control the lightshow.

Looking down the right edge of the board, we run into another 4-pin fan header, the EZ debug LEDs (the problem area remains lit if there is a problem during the POST process), the 24-pin ATX connector to power the board, a 15-pin front panel USB 3.2 Gen1 (5 Gbps) port, and a front-panel USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10 Gbps) Type-C port.
Source: https://www.tomshardware.com

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