First post, by StriderTR
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Over the years, I've used many different motherboards, but there are only a few that really stick out in my memory. They may not be anything particularly special, they may not be the best looking, but these boards are the ones that gave me some of the best and most memorable experiences.
Honestly, throughout the early "IBM" PC days, I never really had a mainboard preference, as long as it did what I asked of it, they were all pretty much the same to me. It wasn't' until after Y2K that I got my hands on a board that I truly enjoyed using and kept for over 15 years, and that was the AOpen AK72.
While there are plenty of other boards like it, the AK72 was the one I found at a local shop, really cheap, and picked up to build my new system around. What sold me on the board, and what kept me using it for so many years, first as my primary PC, then later on as a "retro gaming" PC, was the fact it had ISA, PCI, and AGP 4X support. That alone made it very useful, but the native support for Windows 95 (OSR 2.5), since for some reason that is, still to this day, my favorite MS OS. Evey configuration on that AK72 was stable and I rarely ever had any problems with it.
In it's final configuration before I so stupidly sold it off, it was running an AMD Athlon K7 700, 768MB PC133, Sound Blaster AWE 64 Gold ISA for sound, and an ATI X850 Pro 256MB GPU for video. This was my "retro" gaming setup for many years. Not the best, not the worst, but I truly enjoyed that setup and that AK72.
After that, it was several years until a more modern board really impressed me, and that was when I decided to hop on AMD's FX platform and built an FX-8350, R9 290X Crossfire system around the Asus Sabretooth 990FX board. The cosmetics of it, the stability running all that hardware, overclocked, for over 3 years, really impressed me at the time. It was that board that sold me on the Asus "TUF" line of products that I still prefer today.
Fast forward to 2023, in my quest to build an compact Windows 95/DOS retro gaming system, I discovered one of the first mini-ITX boards ever made, the EPIA-800 (thanks Vogons!). This board has fast become one of my favorites. The ITX form factor, the native support for Windows 9x, the good SB Pro emulation and capable enough Cyberblade i7 have surprised me with it's Windows 95 and DOS capabilities. Again, not the best, not the worst, but it does what I want it to do, takes up very little space, and looks cool doing it!
So, what are some of the motherboards that, for whatever reason, stick out in your memory and creep their way to the top of your favorites list?
Retro Blog & Builds: https://theclassicgeek.blogspot.com/
3D Things: https://www.thingiverse.com/classicgeek/collections
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