TP-Link WiFi 6E PCIe Card with Bluetooth 5.3 vs WiFi 7 PCIe Card with BE200 | 9.3Gbps, BT 5.4, 4K QAM, 320MHz
Overall winner: TP-Link WiFi 6E PCIe Card with Bluetooth 5.3
Key Differences
TP-Link (A) uses the Intel AX210 module with WiFi 6E and a magnetized dual-antenna base, and requires Windows 11 for 6 GHz operation; OKN (B) advertises WiFi 7 with a BE200 chipset and higher peak data rates but is reported incompatible with AMD motherboards and has mixed Bluetooth reports. Choose TP-Link if you want a proven Intel AX210-based WiFi 6E solution with strong user ratings and flexible antenna placement; choose OKN if you need advertised WiFi 7 throughput and a lower listed price but are on an Intel platform and accept potential Bluetooth/motherboard limits
TP-Link WiFi 6E PCIe Card with Bluetooth 5.3
TP-Link WiFi 6E PCIe card for desktop PCs with Intel AX210 chipset, dual antennas, magnetic base, and Bluetooth 5.3. Improves 6 GHz, 5 GHz, and 2.4 GHz performance for stable connections. Customers note easy installation and strong signal reception
Pros
- WiFi 6E with 6 GHz band support
- Dual antennas for better reliability
- Magnetized base for flexible positioning
- Bluetooth 5.3 with broad compatibility
Cons
- Bluetooth performance varies by USB header availability
- 6 GHz usage requires Windows 11
- Some users report Bluetooth range variability
WiFi 7 PCIe Card with BE200 | 9.3Gbps, BT 5.4, 4K QAM, 320MHz
PCIe wireless card with WiFi 7 BE200 module, Bluetooth 5.4, tri-band support, and 4K QAM. Delivers up to 9.3Gbps and higher capacity; plug-and-play on Windows 10/11. Customer insight notes easy installation and improved speed
Pros
- WiFi 7 with BE200 module
- High data rates up to 9.3Gbps
- Bluetooth 5.4 built-in
- Plug-and-play on Windows
Cons
- Mixed reviews on Bluetooth connectivity
- Not compatible with AMD motherboards
- Some users report setup variability
Head-to-Head
| Criteria | Winner |
|---|---|
| Price | OKN |
| Durability | Tie |
| Versatility | TP-Link |
| User Reviews | TP-Link |