Final thoughts and rating
...Sapphire's Pure Platinum A85XT pricing needs to drop by around £20 for it to offer mass-market appeal.AMD can be cautiously optimistic about the potential success of its second-generation 'Trinity' APUs. They offer a decent all-round package for users looking to build an inexpensive, feature-rich PC.
But these APUs ship with a new form factor, FM2, requiring the purchase of a motherboard at the same time. Sapphire's £100 Pure Platinum A85XT is an enthusiast-orientated board that sits near the top-end of AMD FM2 pricing and it offers a couple of features not normally seen on APU-supporting boards: Bluetooth and an mSATA slot.
Benchmark results and overclocking potential are both good while the BIOS is reasonable, but our biggest hurdle in recommending any £100 A85X-based motherboard is the near-identical performance pushed out by half-priced A75 models. AMD's FM2 platform puts value above all-out performance, we feel, so Sapphire's Pure Platinum A85XT pricing needs to drop by around £20 for it to offer mass-market appeal.
Bottom line: a decent board if you need to pull every last MHz out of an AMD FM2 chip.
The Good
Solid performance
Decent expansion-slot layout
Overclocks wellThe Bad
£100 AMD FM2 boards don't make a lot of implicit sense
BIOS is bettered by competing boardsHEXUS Rating
Sapphire Pure Platinum A85XTHEXUS Where2Buy
The reviewed motherboard is available here.
HEXUS Right2Reply
At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.