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ASUS P5N7A-VM

 & Jason Cross jason_cross@ziffdavis.com

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

Our Expert
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65 EXPERTS
43 YEARS
41,500+ REVIEWS
 - Processors
5.0 Exemplary

The Bottom Line

The ASUS P5N7A-VM is one of the best HTPC motherboards you can buy.

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Pros & Cons

    • Four video output options, great HDMI functionality and 7.1 audio.
    • Fast graphics.
    • Excellent video quality, performance.
    • Must run games at low settings, resolutions.

Generally, I'm not a fan of motherboards with integrated graphics, but they can be desirable in a home theater PC where power consumption, heat, and fan noise are critical issues but 3D rendering performance typically isn't. The ASUS P5N7A-VM microATX, which uses the Nvidia Nforce 9300 chipset, is a perfect example. Even with DDR2-800 RAM and a modest CPU, if you're using this board, games that don't fare well with integrated graphics become playable. For video, this chipset and motherboard are awesome. You get loads of connections, excellent 7.1 audio and HDMI repeater/receiver support, and top-tier video decoding and performance in a compact, passively cooled board. Energy efficiency is great, too. This feature-rich and well-designed motherboard will make a great base for your next HTPC.

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Final Thoughts

 - Processors

ASUS P5N7A-VM

5.0 Exemplary

The ASUS P5N7A-VM is one of the best HTPC motherboards you can buy.

Get It Now

Buy It Now

About Our Expert

Jason Cross

Jason Cross

jason_cross@ziffdavis.com

Jason was a certified computer geek at an early age, playing with his family's Apple II when he was still barely able to write. It didn't take long for him to start playing with the hardware, adding in 80-column cards and additional RAM as his family moved up through Apple II+, IIe, IIgs, and eventually the Macintosh. He was sucked into Intel based side of the PC world by his friend's 8088 (at the time, the height of sophisticated technology), and this kicked off a never-ending string of PC purchases and upgrades.

Through college, where he bounced among several different majors before earning a degree in Asian Studies, Jason started to pull down freelance assignments writing about his favorite hobby—video and computer games. It was shortly after graduation that he found himself, a thin-blooded Floridian, freezing his face off at Computer Games Magazine in Vermont, where he founded the hardware and technology section and built it up over five years before joining the ranks at ExtremeTech and moving out to beautiful northern California. When not scraping up his hands on the inside of a PC case, you can invariably find Jason knee-deep in a PC game, engrossed in the latest console title, or at the movie theater.

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