General | + | - | |
With the G1.Assassin, Gigabyte has a motherboard in its portfolio that is tailored especially to the needs of gamers. Therefore we liked the high quality creative sound card delivers crisp and clear sound as well as realtime encoding. Futhermore there also is a Bigfoot Killer E2100 network chip which became kind of a defacto standard on gaming motherboards. One can argue on sense or nonsense of this chip but nevertheless it makes sense if you own a cheap router and if you'd like to have something that is capable of packet priorization (QoS). | -
Design - Layout - Creative sound card - Bigfoot Killer NIC |
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Layout | + | - | |
Generally the Gigabyte G1.Assassins layout is very well thought. Once more very practical are the angled SATA. Unfortunately there are no power- and reset-buttons. You also wont find a debug display which would become very useful in case you should have issues with a component in your system or the board itself. If your thinking about a multi GPU setup you'll definitely like that there is plenty of space between the different PCI Express x16 slots which allows an adequate cooling of more than one GPU. One thing which has the potential to cause headaches is the XL-ATX formfactor of this board which makes it incompatible to quite a lot of cases. Furthermore the last expansion slot is a PCI-Express x16. If you put a dual slot graphics card in there the connectors at the bottom edge of the board will be blocked. |
- Angled SATA connectors
- Plenty of space between PCI Express x16 Slots
for Multi-GPU-Setup
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- XL-ATX Formfactor | |
Page 1 - Introduction | Page 4 - Connectors and I/O |
Page 2 - Specifications / Delivery | Page 5 - Conclusion |
Page 3 - Layout |
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ASUS Rampage III Black Edition | Review: Gigabyte G1.Assassin |
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