MSI PRO A620M-E Micro-ATX Motherboard
Build a reliable AMD Ryzen 7000 series system with the MSI PRO A620M-E Micro-ATX Motherboard. Designed for productivity and mainstream gaming, this motherboard features the A620 chipset and AM5 socket. It supports up to 96GB of DDR5 memory across two slots, offering high-speed performance. Storage is handled by four SATA 6.0 Gb/s ports and two M.2 slots for fast NVMe SSDs. Connectivity includes a 1 Gb/s Ethernet port for stable wired networking and essential expansion via PCIe slots. This board provides a solid foundation for your next PC build.
$105.00
Owner Satisfaction
4.2
/ 5
Category Rank
954
/ 1130
#954 in Motherboards
Price vs Category Average
-69%
Below average
CPU Socket
5
/ AM
Who it's for
- Highly Affordable AM5 Entry
- Modern Connectivity Standard
- Compact Micro-ATX Design
Who should skip it
- Limited Overclocking and Power
- Minimal Expansion Slots
- Basic Rear I/O Configuration
Key Specs
CPU Socket
AM5
Chipset
AMD A620
Form Factor
Micro ATX
Memory Support
DDR5 up to 96 GB
Memory Slots
2
Storage
4x SATA 6.0 Gb/s Ports
Storage
2x M.2 Slots
Networking
1 x 1 Gb/s LAN Port
Features
- Solid foundation for Ryzen 7000 series
- Supports high-speed DDR5 memory
- Compact Micro ATX form factor
- Dual M.2 slots for fast storage
- Reliable 1 Gb/s wired networking
- Essential PCIe expansion options
- Optimized for productivity and gaming
What customers say
The MSI PRO A620M-E is overwhelmingly praised as an excellent budget champion, successfully lowering the entry barrier for the AM5 platform and Ryzen 7000 series processors. Customers value this board for its affordability, recognizing it as a reliable, no-frills foundation for basic gaming or productivity builds. The core sentiment centers on its strong value proposition: it boots and runs systems stably, often supported by a user-friendly BIOS. However, this low price necessitates clear compromises. Users acknowledge the limited feature set, specifically noting the restriction imposed by only two DDR5 RAM slots, which limits future upgrades. Furthermore, the basic VRM design and sparse connectivity, including minimal USB ports and no integrated Wi-Fi, require users to accept inherent limitations in expandability when choosing this cost effective option.
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