Help choosing among the B450 motherboards for my Ryzen 7 2700

Please, I really need a suggestion
I'm a college student who study abroad and on a real tight budget, I want to build my first pc for gaming and editing. I'm choosing the Ryzen 7 2700 as my cpu, but I'm having a trouble on deciding which motherboards will be perfect for my cpu. My list are:
1. MSi B450-A Pro (I really want this, because it's the cheapest)
2. MSi B450 Gaming Plus
3. MSi B450 Tomahawk (idk about this one, but this is my maximum budget)

And to take notes, here are some of my quiestion and consideration:
1. I'm on budget so I can't afford a X470 chipsets. I chooses Ryzen 7 because it's perfect for me for rendering and multi-tasking. And also, I'm not planning on doing an OC with my components either.
2. I heard that on this B450 Gaming Plus and Tomahawk, MSi uses the same mosfet as found in their X470 chipsets, is it true?
3. Does MSi B450-A Pro could handle my Ryzen 7 2700? I'm just really considerate because I want my mobo to be a future proof and not failing on me.

Thank you
 
Since this is your first computer build attempt.
I would suggest you start with the MSI B450 Gaming Plus.
Since the ryzen 2700 is 300.00 retail normally and this mobo on sale is 139.00.
Roughly you would pay 450.00 plus taxes and shipping.

I recommend this combo here and yes gigabyte is as good as msi if not better at times.
https://www.newegg.com/Product/ComboBundleDetails.aspx?ItemList=Combo.3885173&Description=ryzen 2700

The MSI B450 supports the r7 2700 so don't worry about it.
If it doesn't boot after you get it built up, take it to a computer store or have a friend with a ryzen computer do it for you.
Have them update the bios to the latest one for you so it will fully boot up.

This memory should do for both mobo's and its at 45.99 per piece for 3 days.
https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820164006&Description=crucial ballistix&cm_re=crucial_ballistix-_-20-164-006-_-Product

If you're tight budget is in the ball park of 600.00 dollars, you could get away with building it.
Just have you're own case already and a newer "not older psu" ready to go.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01MTJTO2O/?tag=httpwwwtechsp-20
 
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