Specialized products for "cryators" ― artists, designers, 3D animators, editors, etc. — are playing an increasingly prominent role in the component market. No one has a clear idea how to make it perfect yet, so manufacturers are playing with formats and functionality. For example, for a series of Vision motherboards, Gigabyte engineers decided to replay the standard approach to the distribution of PCI Express processor lines, allowing more high-speed SSD drives running on the PCI-E 4.0 bus to be installed in the system. Unlike conventional gaming or office motherboards, Vision motherboards are equipped with a microphone to search and monitor noise inside the case.


The appearance of the representatives of the Vision series will cause positive emotions among fans of classic colours and fans of Apple aesthetics. Protective elements are usually painted white, and all this stuff is covered with several silver casings, reminiscent of the aesthetics of Apple laptops. Otherwise, these are quite strong A-class motherboards, which will gladly take on board a powerful Core i7/Ryzen 7 processor, a couple of video cards and four high-speed DDR4 memory strips with a total volume of up to 128 GB.

The Vision series was launched in 2020, so the range of the series so far looks more modest than that of Aorus or Gaming. The equipment of all "vision" plus or minus is the same, and the spread in prices is in the range from 30 to 80%. Gigabyte decided to divide the models into three streams — Vision D, Vision G and Vision W. In the first case, we are talking about the "classic" representatives of the series with white radiators and protective covers. Vision G is equipped with backlight and Gigabyte RGB Fusion controllers to adjust the internal illumination of the PC case. Almost always these plans are based on standard desktop sockets like Intel Z590 and AMD B550. Well, the Vision W boards are built on a specialized Intel W480 server chipset.