MSI B150A Gaming Pro Motherboard Review

Today, we get a chance to review a unique motherboard from MSI. Typically, we look at enthusiast products, since we are, after all, Overclockers.com. But not all of our readers overclock (blasphemy!) or need high-end equipment. Sometimes you just need a no frills motherboard for standard day-to-day operation. In that light, MSI sent along thier B150A Gaming Pro that makes use of Intel’s B150 chipset devoid of overclocking bells and whistles. As the name implies, the board is steered towards the gaming crowd. Let’s take a look at the board and see what it has to offer!

Specifications

Listed below are some of the specifications for the MSI B150A Gaming Pro. It will support 6th Gen Intel Core/Pentium/Celeron processors on the LGA 1151 socket. It has two full length PCIe slots with one at the full PCIe 3.0 x16 bandwidth, while the other is limited to x4. With that, you will not have the ability to SLI NVIDIA cards as they require a minimum of x8 in that configuration. For those that are not using a discrete video card and will rely on the CPU’s iGPU, the Gaming Pro has outputs for it as well. They come in the form of 1x DL DVI, and 1x HDMI.

The board supports up to 64GB of DDR4 2133 MHz in its four DIMM slots. Being part of the B150 chipset family, the board will not go past that value, even when using XMP settings. To that end, grab the lowest timing DDR4 2133 MHz sticks you can find for best performance. There are a total of six SATA3 6Gbps ports and one SATA Express. On the USB side of things, there are two USB3.1 Gen2 Type-A ports, four USB3.1 Gen1 ports, and six USB2.0 ports. Just for clarification, USB 3.1 Gen1 is more commonly known as USB 3.0. The LAN duties are handled by the Intel I219-V, which has 15KV anti-surge protection as well as the Gaming LAN manager to help optimize traffic shaping for gaming.

While having a good NIC is almost a pre-requisite for multiplayer gaming, so is having good audio. The B150A Gaming Pro utilizes the 8-channel Audio Boost 3, which is the same as some of its Z170 big brothers (Realtek IC).

While it isn’t teaming with high-end features, there is plenty of what you need here for a great gaming experience and all around performance.

MSI B150A Gaming Pro Specifcations
CPUSupports 6th Gen Intel® Core™ / Pentium® / Celeron® Processors
LGA 1151 Socket
ChipsetIntel® B150X Chipset
Graphics Interface1 * PCI-E 3.0 x16, 1 * PCI-E 3.0 x4
Display Interface1 * DL DVI, 1 * HDMI – Requires Processor Graphics
Memory Support4 DIMMs, Dual Channel DDR4- 2133 MHz (No OC possible)
Expansion Slots2 * PCI-E x1 slots, 2 * PCI slots
Multi-Graphics TechnologySupport for 2-Way AMD CrossFire™ technology
SATA Interface6 * SATA3 6 Gb/s, 1 * SATA-Express
USB2 * USB 3.1 Gen2 Type-A
4* USB 3.1 Gen1
6 * USB 2.0
LAN1 * Intel I219-V (w/15KV Anti-surge and Gaming LAN Manager
Back Panel ConnectionsPS/2 Gaming Device Port
2 USB 2.0
DVI-D Port
2 USB 3.1 Gen 2 Type-A Ports
2 USB 3.1 Gen1 Type-A Ports
HDMI Port
Intel I219-V LAN
2 USB 3.1 Gen1 Type-A Ports
Audio/Optical S/PDIF Out
Audio8-channel Audio Boost 3
Form FactorATX Form Factor

Features

This board comes with what almost looks like an unfinished PCB in that it is mostly black, but at the right edge there is around 3/8″ worth of brown PCB. I thought that was unique and a bit odd aesthetically. Anyway, on the bottom of the board, spaced a couple inches apart from top to bottom are some LEDs. MSI allows you to edit these LEDs supporting up top 16.5M colors with eight LED effects.

The B150A Gaming Pro also uses MSI’s DDR4 Boost technology, which fully isolates the memory circuitry from the other components and helps ensure the memory signal stays pure for maximum performance and stability. This shouldn’t be an issue at those low memory speeds, but hey, its still a value add for sure.

As mentioned above in the specifications, this board uses the Intel I219-V NIC which has 15KV anti-surge protection and comes with traffic shaping software called Gaming LAN Manager, which will automatically prioritize games above other applications.

Next up is Audio Boost 3. The Realtek IC under the hood is protected both physically and for EMI by a metal shield covering it up. This helps to minimize interference from the surrounding motherboard components. It also sports dual OPA1652 AMPs (though not replaceable as in higher end boards) to help round out a superior audio experience.

Though the board is not of the enthusiast class, MSI still uses higher end components to increase reliability with its Military Class V standards. These include solid caps and all new Titanium chokes. Last, but not least, is MSI’s use of ‘VGA Armor’ on the PCIe slots. In this case, there is no metal shielding around the PCIe bracket, but there are more solder points to help prevent board damage from the heavy GPUs that mount into them.

Here are some additional features courtesy of MSI:

ico-mysticlightMystic Light
Customize and set up your own color scheme with Mystic Light to make your PC look & feel brand new! Supporting 16.5 million colors and 8 stylish LED effects.
ico-ddr4bstxmpledDDR4 Boost & XMP LED
By fully isolating the memory circuitry from other components, DDR4 Boost ensures the memory signal to stay pure for maximum performance and stability.
ico-gmnglanshockresMSI GAMING LAN & LAN Protect
MSI GAMING LAN is powered by the Intel® I219-V with 15KV anti-surge and intelligent GAMING LAN Manager to automatically prioritize games above other applications.
ico-audbst3

Audio Boost 3

The ultimate audio solution for gamers. With dual OPA1652 AMPs and metal EMI Shielding, experience breathtaking, crystal clear sound quality.

ico-milcls4ti

Military Class V

A new standard in high quality components. The all new Titanium Choke has a solid structure, it can withstand even higher temperatures and has better heat dissipation.

ico-vgaarmrReinforced VGA Armor
To protect high-end graphics cards, the PCI-e slots feature VGA Armor. These PCI-E slots have more solder points on the PCB for 35% more strength.
  • 2X FASTER USB 3.1 Gen2 Type-A –Enables lightning fast transfer speeds.
  • ENHANCED OVERVOLTAGE PROTECTION – Prevents overvoltage and short-circuit damage of the CPU and other components.
  • Gaming Hotkey – Start your games or applications with keyboard hotkeys to speed up your gaming experience or use it as macro keys inside a game.
  • Click BIOS 5 features – Simple/Advanced mode, M-Flash, Favorites, Hardware Monitor 2, Board Explorer, Memory Try It, High-resolution font.
  • EZ Debug LED – Easiest way to troubleshoot.
  • Intel® SBA 4.0 – The perfect solution to boost security & productivity for small businesses.
  • GAMING Device Port with Mouse Master – Optimized to deliver the best performance for gaming mice and keyboards, with Mouse Master to customize DPI and set macros.
  • Software – Command Center, RAMdisk, Gaming APP with FPS counter, Live Update 6, ECO Center.

For further features and details, please see the MSI website for the B150A Gaming Pro.

Retail Packaging and Accessories

Below is a brief slideshow showing the retail packaging and accessories. The front of this box is still black and red as MSI’s gaming themed boards are. However, what you do not see as prominent is the MSI Gaming dragon. Instead, it is what appears to be some kind of concept car in motion. There is the Gaming Series badge, but not across the cover as we normally see. Also on the front it shows the name of the board, the series it comes from (Performance Gaming), and the 6th gen processors it supports.

The back of the packaging shows several high-level features like the DDR boost, VGA armor, Mystic Light for the LED, Gaming LAN, and LAN protect just to name a few. When you open the box up, the motherboard is right on top in its anti-static bag. Below a cardboard partition is where you can find the included accessories and manuals.

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A Closer Look

In our first official look at the board, we see an all black… ok, mostly black PCB with a small PCH heatsink and two independent heatsinks for the VRMs. There are two PCIe x1 slots, 2 PCIe x16 slots, and two legacy PCI slots. Scattered around the CPU socket, DIMM slots, and above the PCIe area are four fan headers.

To the right of the board is that curious stripe I was talking about earlier where the board looks almost not finished. You can see that appearance holds until you actually hit hardware on the PCB. There is a total of about an inch of PCB that simply has nothing going on there. It’s not really a problem more so than it is just a curious look. The LEDs do a good job of shining through that area and illuminating that portion of the board and your case.

Not much to see on the back of the board really. If you look closely, you can see the LEDs on the left, and notice the electrical setup of the PCIe x16 slots are x16/x4.

MSI B150A Gaming Pro - Front
MSI B150A Gaming Pro – Front

Back
Back

Alternate 1
Alternate 1

Alternate 2
Alternate 2

Moving in closer to the board, the lower left hand portion has the EMI shield covering the Audio Boost 3 chip. Towards the top and the middle of the board is another EMI shield, but this time covering the Intel LAN IC. The PCIe has a couple of x1 slots, two x16, and three legacy PCI slots in case one may need those.

Around the DIMM area is the front panel USB3, 24-pin power connector, and a couple of fan headers. To the left you can see a couple of SATA ports and the one SATAe port. I like that there is one SATAe port on this class of board. Also pictured here to the right of the 24 pin is the Easy Debug LEDs that show on boot what the troublesome part may be. I prefer the number/alpha codes, but this is a convenient feature as well.

The socket area has a few of the solid caps perched in front of two heatsinks. There is plenty of area to mount a variety of CPU coolers, or even water blocks if you wanted to quiet operations a bit.

PCIe/Audio/LAN
PCIe/Audio/LAN

DIMM Area
DIMM Area

CPU Socket
CPU Socket

8 pin required
8 pin required

Flipping around to the back panel I/O, we have plenty of ports to keep you attached, including a total of six USB 3.1 ports (two Gen2/four Gen1) and two USB2.0 ports that sit below a PS/2 port. For video outputs the B150A Gaming Pro has a single DL DVI and HDMI port. The audio has the typical 1/8″ jacks with a SPDIF/Optical output.

For storage connectivity, there are a total of six SATA3 6Gpbs ports. Four are on the right edge while two more sit north of the PCH heatsink. A nice addition to a board of this class is one of the new SATA Express ports. The most curious part of the SATA Express ports are the location, which is separated from all the others. All of the SATA/SATA Express ports are oriented vertically.

Back panel I/O
Back panel I/O

SATA Ports
SATA Ports

Across the bottom of the board there are more I/Os – FP Audio, USB ports, as well as your FP buttons.

Bottom I/O
Bottom I/O

Below is a list of some of the ICs used on this board for USB, Super I/O and PCIe to PCI bridge.

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UEFI BIOS and Software

In the slideshow below, we show screenshots of the UEFI Click BIOS 5. As you know from my MSI motherboard reviews, I am a big fan of their BIOS implementation and that doesn’t change here. The only difference here is not having the ability to overclock via multiplier, nor take the ram over 2133 MHz. There are plenty of options in the right places per usual.

Not pictured in this review is MSI Command Center.

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Listed below is the test system used for benchmarking:

Test Setup
CPUIntel 6700K @ Stock (for the motherboard – 4.0 boost to 4.2 GHz)
MotherboardMSI B150A Gaming Pro
RAM2×4 GB DDR4 GSkill Ripjaws 4 @ 2133 11-11-11-28 2T 1.20v
Graphics CardMSI GTX 980 Ti Gaming 6G
Solid State DriveOCZ Vertex 3
Power SupplySeaSonic SS-1000XP (80+ Platinum)
Operating SystemWindows 7 x64 SP1
Graphics Drivers353.30
Equipment
Digital Multimeter

We’ll perform our usual set of benchmarks, which test rendering, memory performance as well as single and multi-threaded CPU performance. For 2D benchmarks, we’ll use SuperPi 1M and 32M, wPrime, Intel XTU and PiFast. For rendering, Cinebench R11.5 and R15. Memory performance is checked against AIDA64 and MaxxMEM. For encoding we use x264 and PoV Ray. Stock testing is performed with the BIOS as you get it out of the box, which will vary from motherboard to motherboard. As far as overclocking goes, it’s just not in the cards on this board. The highest multiplier available was 42X, so I just left it on auto to boost its way on up there. The DDR4 is also limited the spec of 2133 MHz. Since we can’t overclock a thing, there will only be the results from stock speeds and no comparisons like we usually run.

AIDA64 and MaxxMEM – Memory Bandwidth and Throughput

AIDA64
AIDA64

MaxxMEM2

stock-maxmm
MaxxMEM

Cinebench R11.5 and R15 – CPU Rendering Benchmark

Cinebench R11.5
Cinebench R11.5

R15

Cinebench R15
Cinebench R15

Super Pi 1M and 32M / Pifast – Single Threaded CPU Benchmark

Super Pi 1M
Super Pi 1M

32M

Super Pi 32M
Super Pi 32M

PiFast

PiFast
PiFast

WPrime 32M and 1024M, x624, PoV Ray R3.73, 7Zip, and Intel XTU – Multi-Threaded CPU benchmarks

stock-wrpm

x264 Pass 1 and 2

x264
x264

PoV Ray R3.73

POV Ray v3.73
POV Ray v3.73

7zip – Compression Benchmark

7Zip
7Zip

Intel XTU

Intel XTU
Intel XTU

Conclusion

MSI has a very solid budget board in the MSI B150A Gaming Pro. Being a gaming oriented board, we see features like the Intel LAN with Gaming LAN software to help automatically shape traffic and make sure you are getting the lowest ping for your online games. They also use the Realtek based Audio Boost 3 for sound and the ‘gaming device mouse port’, which all help improve your gaming experience.

I am not sure on the MSRP for this board, but I would expect somewhere around $100 or so. I do not see any other B150 chipset motherboards on the market at this moment, so the the board will have to stand on its own merits – which it can certainly do. If you are looking for an entry-level motherboard with a slew of features geared towards gaming, make sure you check out the MSI B150A Gaming Pro.

EDITORS NOTE: MSI reached out and confirmed a MSRP of $119.

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Joe Shields (Earthdog)

About Joe Shields 326 Articles
Joe started writing around 2010 for Overclockers.com covering the latest news and reviews that include video cards, motherboards, storage and processors. In 2018, he went ‘pro’ writing for Anandtech.com covering news and motherboards. Eventually, he landed at Tom’s Hardware where he wrote news, covered graphic card reviews, and currently writes motherboard reviews. If you can’t find him benchmarking and gathering data, Joe can be found working on his website (Overclockers.com), supporting his two kids in athletics, hanging out with his wife catching up on Game of Thrones, watching sports (Go Browns/Guardians/Cavs/Buckeyes!), or playing PUBG on PC.

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Robert17

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3,689 messages 134 likes

It shows to be priced at 120-130 Euros on a couple of European sites which comes out to about $130-145, give or take a $1,000,000.

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EarthDog

Gulper Nozzle Co-Owner

76,710 messages 3,418 likes

Excellent! Though that price feels a bit high for a non overclocking board I have to admit.

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EarthDog

Gulper Nozzle Co-Owner

76,710 messages 3,418 likes

I updated the article with the MSRP ($119).

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BrokenPC

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Echhh Does supporting SLI as opposed to Xfire cost Intel money or something? Does Intel hate team green? I know all these buttmunchers want to take over the world but no SLI support. Why? Seriously, I have had both ATI and Nvidea cards over the years. The AMD cards I have had self destruct could probably support a family of four for a few months. Even my POS work PC gets a BSOD playing flash videos.. Faulting module? ATIXXX... What else.

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Robert17

Premium Member

3,689 messages 134 likes

Echhh Does supporting SLI as opposed to Xfire cost Intel money or something? Does Intel hate team green? I know all these buttmunchers want to take over the world but no SLI support. Why? Seriously, I have had both ATI and Nvidea cards over the years. The AMD cards I have had self destruct could probably support a family of four for a few months. Even my POS work PC gets a BSOD playing flash videos.. Faulting module? ATIXXX... What else.

What bearing does this post have on the MB review? Seriously, I'm not getting a connection at all?????

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EarthDog

Gulper Nozzle Co-Owner

76,710 messages 3,418 likes

Echhh Does supporting SLI as opposed to Xfire cost Intel money or something? Does Intel hate team green? I know all these buttmunchers want to take over the world but no SLI support. Why? Seriously, I have had both ATI and Nvidea cards over the years. The AMD cards I have had self destruct could probably support a family of four for a few months. Even my POS work PC gets a BSOD playing flash videos.. Faulting module? ATIXXX... What else.

The more you know......... NVIDIA SLI cannot run in a 4x slot. The slots on this board run at 16x and 4x. So only CFx would be supported. There isn't a conspiracy, its not about money. It is what it is due to the physical setup up the PCIe lanes on this board.

@ Robert - See above. :)

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BrokenPC

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What bearing does this post have on the MB review? Seriously, I'm not getting a connection at all?????

Sorry, it was more of a comment on the motherboard. And a question about supporting SLI or not. I guess I should have made a new post.

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EarthDog

Gulper Nozzle Co-Owner

76,710 messages 3,418 likes

Not really. Because it wouldn't have made sense... at least in the context of this board.

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Robert17

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3,689 messages 134 likes

Yeah, I'd read the review and picked up on the PCIe lane set-up. I improperly assumed that BrokenPC had done the same, so didn't understand the rant.

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BrokenPC

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The PCI lane setup for the chipset is what is limiting it though right? I just like the PC architecture so much I don't like to see entire swaths of Video card makers get a key piece of tech removed for what seems fairly trivial. If Auto manufacturers could make wheels and copyright the sizes they would. Anyhow, was not a rant. It's Friday. Not like I am in the market for a 100.00 mobo. I appreciate the education though, been out of it for a while.

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