It does look great. A bit better bang-for-buck than the Sabertooth 990FX. For Bulldozer, though, I think the best route is 990X. Unless you're thinking of doing tri-SLI or CF, there's really no point in 990FX. For the best bang-for-buck Performance board I'd choose the
Gigabyte GA-990XA-UD3 since it has most features people would need (including high OCing) and it's only $140.
True, but not all power designs are created equal. High end caps and heatsink cooled 4x1 rated at 140 watts+ is more than enough to overclock a 95 watt, 8 core, BD cpu.
I've seen a a dozen or so people overclocking a 125 watt 9xx black edition with this Asrock board @ 3.8+, and a few overclocking a x6 also.
I was seriously considering this board untill I found out the AM3+ socket is a dead end in about 10 months.
I'd rather not risk it, though. I'd prefer 6+2 or 8+2 phase, but not higher than that. If you get the 95W FX-8100, which will probably OC almost the same as the FX-8150, you'll probably also need similar voltage. The TDP for the 8150 is 125W, so it's safe to say with a medium over-volt it'll consume 175-200W. The only way AMD got a 95W TDP for the 8100 was through lower clock speeds in comparison to the 6100, though since they're all unlocked the 8100 makes more sense than the 8150, at least if it's priced $30 lower.
As for future-proofing, you're right. AMD took the wrong decision there. They decided to make it compatible with AM3 but forgot that it means in the future it's pretty much dead as they can only get so much future-proofing from an old socket. Because of that alone and the fact that Ivy Bridge is gonna use LGA 1155 I'm pretty much set on going Intel and getting an i5 2400, i5 2500K, or
Xeon E3-1230.