Final Words

If you are looking for an AMD Athlon motherboard, the DFI NFII Ultra LanParty is without equal. For the gaming, case-modding, or LAN Party enthusiast, there is no Athlon motherboard that we have tested which comes close to the package provided by the DFI NFII Ultra LanParty. For those building with the popular side-window cases, the glow-under-black-light UV-reactive slots and cables make the NFII stand out from the competition. The multitude of cables and adapters that come stock with the NFII provide all the game, USB, firewire, sound, and front I/O ports any gamer could want.

However, we found there was much more to the NFII than attention-grabbing eye-candy. The NFII is also the best-performing AMD Athlon board that we have tested. It overclocks further than any other Athlon board we have seen, and it performs better at all speeds in gaming benchmarks. The board was clearly designed and tweaked for gaming performance.

The available Performance BIOS we tested on this motherboard is icing on an already impressive cake. The very wide range of voltages and adjustments available will appeal to the computer enthusiast who will be excited at the ability to squeeze all the performance possible out of the nForce2 Ultra 400 chipset.

Even though the DFI is the best Athlon board that we have tested, it isn’t perfect. Those planning to use SATA hard drives will have to decide if the single on-board SATA connector, which disables Primary IDE, is a configuration they can live with. If it isn’t, then they would be forced to add a SATA IDE controller, or should look to other top-performing nForce2 boards, such as the Gigabyte 7NNXP. And while there are two LAN connections on the DFI NFII Ultra, neither provides a Gigabit LAN connection. If these faults are not very important to you, then this is the board to own. If you are looking for the best IDE RAID options available on any Athlon board, then it is hard to overlook this unique board with RAID 1.5, which allows both striping and mirroring with just two drives.

DFI has clearly succeeded in putting together a package that will excite many target groups. The NFII Ultra succeeds on many fronts, and will please many buyers. It's a unique board in a unique package with top-notch performance, and tweaking options to make any enthusiast drool. With all of the accessories and options in the package, at its current price, it is also a GREAT value.


High End Workstation Performance - SPEC Viewperf 7.0 (continued)
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  • Anonymous User - Friday, August 1, 2003 - link


    This article is useless because it doesn't help anyone that is looking for a high-end board.

    1.Readers want to see how it compares in games! Even though it is stated that different video cards are used, these numbers do not help anyone.

    2.Readers want to see how it compares against other top of the line boards! (why not compare it against a P3, it would be just as usefull!)

    3."Performance tests for the DFI NFII Ultra LanParty were run with the ATI 9800 PRO 128MB video card with AGP Aperture set to 32MB"
    AGP Aperture set to 32MB??? Most people would set this to 128MB! Is there a compatibility problem that should of been stated?


    This article should either be fixed or removed from AnandTech's website as it is damaging to their reputation.

    If nothing is done about this article then it shows how much AnandTech listens to it's readers.

    -no insult intended towards anyone-
  • Anonymous User - Friday, August 1, 2003 - link

    This article is a bit low on quality. Visiting the forums I know there are tons of qualified guys/gals that would love, including myself, to write/work at anand. I can't believe that this new guy was the best thing they found. I agree with other comments posted. I also hate with a passion the new benchmark result that are used in some of the article, some were flash... I restrict what runs on my browser because I hate to see a woman f****** a cow when I browse. What happened to the plain jpeg/gif of the past? Would much prefer that since otherwise no point of reading the article
  • Anonymous User - Friday, August 1, 2003 - link

    just wanted to respond to number 18, who quoted one of my comments.

    Actually man, I have been a NVIDIA fan and own several NVIDIA products. However as with most of us gamers you have to go where the speed, performance and quality is. I do own a 9700 pro and currently use it for my main gaming, but then again why not? does NVIDIA produce anything that compares?

    NVIDIA has had their last 2 product lines fail, along with there cheats and shortcuts to produce good numbers. I seem to remember another company that did those things, can we say 3DFX? Who baught them???? NVIDIA.

    my point was not that i am biased, but that ATI is currently the top of the line for speed, quality and performance, besides the fact it supports the new directx9.

    which is better to do tests on after all, outdated and slow technology, or up to date top of the line technology?
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, July 31, 2003 - link

    Jeez, why would anyone even bother writing articles for such ungrateful SOBs
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, July 31, 2003 - link

    I may have missed it, but how much is this thing gonna cost?
  • justly - Thursday, July 31, 2003 - link

    There is an explanation about the scores, at the bottom of the preformance test configuration page you can read this

    "Many benchmarks show widely different results with different video hardware, so we have indicated benchmarks run with the ATI Radeon 9800 PRO with an asterisk. Benchmarks without an asterisk were run with the nVidia Ti4600."

    Iam glad to see the move to the ATi 9800 Pro, this eliminates any video bottleneck and allowes for 8X AGP compatibility testing.
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, July 31, 2003 - link

    This article really needs fixin!

    First major complaint is the use of old graphics cards. Compare apples to apples. Not apples to oranges to peaches.

    Second, the Asus A78NX was not tested either. This IS the gold standard with AMD enthusiasts. How can we make a good comparison?

    Third, where are the game tests and 3D Mark scores?
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, July 31, 2003 - link

    In response to #6(Wesley):

    I'm not saying your numbers are wrong, I'm saying your description seems wrong. As #21 points out, that description makes absolutely no sense, and as far as I've read, it's wrong. RAID 1.5 is a RAID 1 mirror with "optimized" reads; nothing more. Check Tom's Hardware, I believe they have a good article on this.
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, July 31, 2003 - link

    Umm....Striping and mirroring with 2 drives only?

    OK...Let's look at this the way he explained it:

    Take 2, 80 GB drives...

    Half of each contains is striped, the other half used to mirror the stripe.

    In what way is this useful? If 1 drive fails, you've lost the stripe AND the useless mirror...

    Please explain to me why this is a good thing, Anandtech....

    -Phil Green
    LM Information Systems
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, July 31, 2003 - link

    ok i wont comment the different video cards used, im sure you realise this isn't right... especially for the games benches.
    hopefully you'll make up, testing the other boards with this raddy too... also all tests that were done on just this board shall be done to the rest of the boards in time... when you fix all these things i hope you'll put up some notice on the main page.

    i got a major complaint however... the idea to use flash for displaying the graphs isn't good at all. the newest flash plugins for mozilla are incredibly slow, and almost make my pc freeze as i open multiple tabs with your articles(with at least 2 flash adds on each page) so i prefer to disable my flash plugin. i know i dont represent the majority of your readers here, so i'm not important... but yet i think you should consider simple gifs for your graphs.

    now another thing... why does the forum open in such a weird window? i mean, no addressbar and toolbar, etc. thats kinda annoying.

    now a question about the test results... i find some specview results quite weird. in a couple if tests the dfi scores quite less than the rest, and then there's that test where dfi scores 5 times more than the rest.... i'd like to read your comment on these tests, hopefully you have some explanation.

    bye folks, and forgive my bitching :) inspite it, i do like your site and thank you for the articles. you're doing a great job

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