zeyuanfu :
1, The board sin't THAT crappy, something worse would be a P67 board
2, Seriously? The boards an 8-series, so it's the generation before the 9-series boards. Exaggerating, are you?
If I had to choose worse boards, there are many and all of them are irrelevant.
As for the MSI B85 board, it's only "not that crappy" if you are used to even crappier products like a Pentium P4, for instance.
First off, the B-prefix designates it as a "business" specific chipset with features only of interest to businesses, such as asset management, etc, In that category it has to be compared with the Q85 and Q87, which are both better, but still not targeter to consumer use.
Here is the Pugest Systems description of the B85:
B85 The B85 chipset is the "budget" business option and as such is very limited compared to the other business chipsets. As such, it does not support iSIPP or vPro. Like the Q85 chipset, it has four SATA 6Gb/s ports compared to the six found on Q87. The B85 chipset is a good option for systems that need only basic functionality without the various features found in the other business chipsets.
Then we have to look at what came out for consumers (gamers that are interested in overclocking) since then, That would be the H87, the z87, the H79 and the Z79.
I'm not exaggerating, and you are displaying a remarkable lack of insight into motherbaord chipsets. Given the profile computer you have, I have to think you've never actually built or upgraded a PC and that you're sitting here effectively on the sidelines giving rather poor advice and getting people into situations that they should not be in.
How many gamers have you advised to use a B85 motherboard as a gaming platform? And can you defend your assertion that it is a suitable motherboard for the OP? Can you tell me something about the voltage regulation on the MSI B85 E33? And how it differs between the V1 and V2 versions of that board?