Intel recently promised to bring overclocking to lower-priced chips, but whether platform support would extend to mainstream motherboards remained a mystery. A new rumor now suggests that the upcoming Nova Lake S desktop platform will see Z970 replace both the high-end Z890 and the mainstream B860, while a new B960 chipset will serve as the true budget option.
Leaker Jaykihn0 provided this information in response to a since-deleted X post highlighting that Z970 will cover most of the market currently served by B860. In response to a VideoCardz comment, he suggested readers view the Z970 as the successor to most B860 boards, noting a shift in positioning rather than a major change in features.
By 'most of the market,' Jaykhin likely means the premium end of the B860 range, specifically models priced between $200 and $250. If Z970 boards land in the $199 to $249 range, buyers in that segment will gain CPU overclocking support, a feature the budget-oriented B960 will lack.
On paper, the rumored Z970 and B960 specifications look nearly identical, with the key difference being support for 'IA OC,' a form of multiplier overclocking. Z970 will support this, but forgo classic bCLK overclocking, while Z990 retains both. B960, on the other hand, skips CPU frequency adjustments entirely and limits users to memory overclocking only. The practical differences will show up in board designs, with B960 models likely trimming M.2 & PCIe slots, USB, LAN, Wi-Fi, and audio options for lower price points.
If this plays out as rumored, Z970 will effectively serve the upper mainstream market, while B960 will move further down the stack. Having two Z-series options in Intel's 900-series Nova Lake lineup also gives board makers room to build two distinct ultra-enthusiast tiers rather than just one, which should translate into more variety for high-end enthusiasts. This positioning would also make Z970 a closer rival to AMD's B950-class chipsets, though full details on AMD's 900-series chipsets are still pending.




