Hey guys here is a selection of the motherboards I have in sight, I just don't know which one I should take.. I would need one for OC and gaming....
Just a note the Asus Sabertooth Z77 supports 1866 DDR3 Memory not like on the link I show you...
so here is the link with my three choices... the price is in swiss franks:
https://www.digitec.ch/ProdukteVergleichen1.aspx?artikel=237937,253882,241079
I would recommend the Asus Maximus V Formula. It is a little bit more than the Sabertooth, but it is an extremely high quality product. It supports up to 32GB of 2800mHz memory, and has built in motherboard water-cooling options, that even without WC, make the motherboard look extremely sexy. It is an EATX motherboard, so it supports up to 3-way SLI/Crossfire, and is built very well. ROG Connect is very neat for OCing, as well. Plus, the ROG UEFI BIOS looks a lot better than other UEFIs out there (cough, cough - EVGA). If you can, get an Asus ROG (Republic of Gamers) motherboard, otherwise, Asus makes a lot of other good Z77 motherboards, such as the P8Z77-V, for a more affordable price. Other companies make good products as well, but I have always thought Asus delivered great performance for a reasonable price. TL;DR Get the Asus Maximus V Formula, Asus P8Z77-V, or Sabertooth - it's up to you.
I'm also looking at the Asrock extreme. It looks really awesome to me. I spent an entire day just comparing motherboards. The extreme 6 looks really awesome to me. I had looked at the sabertooth but i decided against it for two reasons one the armor or whatever its called makes it so that there is less room on the board for coolers and two its so expensive.
And yeah I was thinking about even might getting the http://www.steg-electronics.ch/de/article/asrock-z77-oc-formula-655028.aspx
Asrock Z77 OC Formula ... I know it is more expensive but is it worth the money??
Well that is really up to you do some more research. Make a list of the features it has and think to yourself is this something i really need and want in a motherboard. The other thing i found that helped me was comparing motherboards from the companies websites. Because they will list everything they have to offer while separate seller sites list only the main bullet points. The trick to it though is you have to be a little more wary of what the manufacturer is telling you because they will embellish a little more.