Call me Victor Kermit Kiam, cos I liked this mobo so much I built my new gaming PC around it

One of the purest pleasures of this job is the fact that we get to play around with all kinds of different PC kit. But that also means the hardware team’s PCs are ships of Theseus and are regularly stripped and rebuilt from parts we’re testing or bits left around the PC Gamer offices.

And after Anthony had finished with his ASRock Phantom Gaming B860I Lightning Wi-Fi review, and it was today dropped into our Best Mini-ITX motherboard guide, I knew it was time to give my office system a complete refresh. I will happily admit to being more than a little obsessed by the unalienable cuteness of mini-ITX mobos and chassis, and I’ve been running SFF PCs as my in-office rigs since I returned to PC Gamer Towers back in 2020.

I mean, look at this thing. It’s a tiny square of compact PC gaming potential. With shiny blue shielding, too. Gotta love it.

But why, if I have access to all the best in PC componentry, am I opting to build a gaming PC from Intel parts? The B860I is an LGA1851 board, which means it’s designed for Intel’s latest Core Ultra 200S-series parts. And, if I’m being perfectly honest, they’ve not set the world afire with their gaming or productivity prowess.

What they are now, however, is rather affordable. You can pick up a 20-core Core Ultra 7 265KF for a little over $200 at the moment, and that does start to make an Intel rig more tempting again. And even if you were to drop a Core Ultra 9 chip into this affordable wee board, the ASRock B860I will be able to cope just fine, as you can see from our benchmarks.

⬇️ Click to load benchmarks ⬇️

A photo of the rear IO panel of the ASRock B860i Lightning motherboard

(Image credit: Future)

It’s pretty much as capable as seriously pricey big-boi motherboards from the Intel stable, which is why this diminutive board was a shoo-in for a place in our mini motherboard guide.

And I already run an AMD system at home, one with a Ryzen 9 7950X that recently needed some serious work to get it running coolly again, and I like to keep things balanced, so it was time to switch from my old B450I / Ryzen 7 5800X system and get the ASRock B860I cosied up inside my NZXT H1 v2 chassis with a Core Ultra 5 245K chip inside it.

To complete the Intel contrarianism I also jammed in an Intel B580 GPU alongside for when I really want to get that early 2000s feel of not knowing if a new game is going to run on my PC or come with some new, hitherto undiscovered graphical artifacts.

It’s an exciting time.

But if you’d rather build an AMD-powered mini-ITX gaming PC, then don’t worry, we’ve got all the boards you need…

The quick list

The best mini-ITX motherboards

⬇️ Click to load more of the best Mini-ITX motherboards ⬇️

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