From what I have been reading, I would go with either the Foxconn nF4 board or the Soltek board. I just recently went through one heck of a time deciding myself. For one, I do not care about a SLI board, and have read through the forums that the more expensive nF4 boards, weirdly enough, appear to have instability and driver issues (BSOD, etc) and even some memory module compatibility issues. The Foxconn board has been reviewed about four times now, most recently by X-Bit Labs, who I trust because they tend to be tough, and seems to be fast and stable, but not a good overclocker. I ordered one just yesterday and will have it next week. What finally swayed my decision away from the Soltek board (and nothing against Soltek--I am using their nForce3 250Gb chipset mobo as I type this) is the use of the 8237 southbridge. Not there is anything WRONG with the 8237, but it is OLD and getting OLDER by the moment. VIA really needs to get off their butts and release the 8251. I wanted NCQ and hardware accelerated firewall and everything else the nF4 chipset brings that the 890/8237 combo does not offer. I was also somewhat worried about the fact the Soltek board is using a legacy 20-pin ATX power connector instead of the new 24-pin. Not that at this moment it should be an issue, but I was concerned that higher end video cards may start coming w/o extra power connectors on them (X800XL for example) and rely on the extra voltage provided through that 24-pin connector--which the Soltek board does not possess. I may have been worried about nothing, but I see every other board except the Soltek offering the 24-pin connector and that has given me pause. That all said, the Soltek board has been reviewed an equal number of times and has shown itself to be typical Soltek--fast, highly stable, and a surprisingly good overclocker. It would already be ordered and on the way if it were not for the outdated 8237 southbridge (not Soltek's fault) and the lack of the 24-pin ATX 2.0 connector (why did Soltek do this.....?)