Let's see, any KR71-133 can run at 166 Mhz any day of the week. Any KX7-333 san run at 185 Mhz any day of the week. I have run both at at over 200 Mhz FSB. At these speeds, the difference between the NForce and the Via chipset is "invisible". I doubt that in most games, or anything other than video encoding or benchmarking would you feel or see any difference. Framerates in most all games are well over 60 FPS on my KR7a-133, and higher still with the KX7-333. The visual difference between 75 FPS and 90 FPS is not noticeable to the human eye. I live for gaming, and I run these boards because the NForce guys are not getting any better experience than I. Sure there are some really great systems out there that blow me away in framerates and benches, but can they see the difference? No. When I can see the difference in FPS, I guess that a change is due.
I also don't understand what you are trying to say here:
I was just saying that there is definitely a difference between overclocking with multiplier and with fsb
Are you trying to say that you can only overclock via multiplier in a Via chipset??? That is the least method of overclocking ANY system. As I mentioned. Most any KX7-333 will hit insane speeds compared to stock, without even having any special knowledge. I can run mine at 213 without issues. The far faster AGP and PCI bus speed, and reduced latency of the RAM, along with increased speed offered by the reduced Fast Command Decode settings available on these boards, more than hold their own.
Like I said, you can always spend more money, but can you really see or feel the difference?? In six months, when games are more intense, DDR II, PCI Express and 64 bit computing come on line, most everyone will want to upgrade. To upgrade now, from a dinosuar, to a platform on the verge of extinction makes no sense. You can argue speed all day long, but most agree that unless you plan on keeping you board for awhile, that waiting until you really need it makes the most sense. With no more Athlon XP's slated for production, AGP cards now extinct, and DDR RAM hearing it's death knell, unless it's necessary, save yourself the hassle of owning a dinosaur the day you buy it.