Alright, srry this is a little late. Better late than never?
First off, the board is a regular ATX board, for those who don't know. Standard 12x9.6 size. There is plenty of space on the board, no cables are overlapping each other, though I did have to rout the 8 pin ATX connector around the cpu fan, but that's minor. Installation was easy, though the I/O shield was cumbersome getting into my centurion case, not their fault though. Now for the good stuff. Installation of the cpu and fan was easy and is documented well enough for the newbie to follow. Well, the computer booted up on the first try, so the MoBo was good, and is still working to this day. Havn't tried any of the ocing features yet, but the BIOS is user friendly and visually pleasing. The only confusion I had was trying to find the front firewire connector on the MoBo. The manuel states it has one, but after at least 5 mins of searching, I concluded that it did in fact NOT have one. Also, if there are any extra LED connectors for your case, I don't think you will have enough inputs. I only had enough pins for the pwr on LED, HDD LED, and reset and pwr on button. Minor flaw though. The passive sinks on the north/southbridge are nice, but havn't checked the temp readings yet. There are 2 on board system fan connectors so you can get temp readouts with smartfan, I think most boards have 2 these days.
If there's any specific questions anyone has, don't hesitate to ask.
To sum it up, I'm entirely pleased with the board. Honestly, at this point, it hasn't differentiated itself from most other boards, although it worked on the first try but once I get to OCing, I'm hoping it will show it's true colors.
Highly recommended board for a budget gaming rig, only $100 from newegg.