What you basically want is to look for an ATX compliant case. See, I've got a full tower case (nzxt h630, for reference.) which has the mounting points for basically every ATX standard available from pico to standard. Yeah, there's like five sizes for atx boards. The bigger the case, the more sizes of boards it will fit, but YES! Your motherboard is a micro atx model. So it will fit that case.
Micro and standard are the most common for desktop builds. With the case you've linked, it's a mini tower, so one of the smallest cases you can get. The orange is nice, but I prefer the purple myself.
I'd actually recommend getting a mid tower. It gives you more room to work. makes it easier to plan cable routing, and the bigger the case the more likely you are to get stuff like drive bays and slots. But that's my preference, and I have big hands. Also, more room for fans if you don't use watercooling, extra airflow never hurts. Ever.
Optical bays are kinda of hard to find these days, as the assumption is that no one uses them anymore. The standard has certainly changed and most companies opt for digital delivery of stuff, but it's also not hard to acquire an external USB bay or external drive too. And I say this as a guy whom only recently ditched his CD-rw, despite not having used it in years.
ALSO! Only one of those cases comes with a power supply, and the one that comes with is a 300 watt. You will need a bigger power supply. Especially since this is going to be a gaming rig and GPUs are complete and utter HOGS. Get a nice 750 or 800 in platinum or titanium (those are ratings, not metals.) and you'll never have to worry about releasing the magic blue smoke.
Micro and standard are the most common for desktop builds. With the case you've linked, it's a mini tower, so one of the smallest cases you can get. The orange is nice, but I prefer the purple myself.
I'd actually recommend getting a mid tower. It gives you more room to work. makes it easier to plan cable routing, and the bigger the case the more likely you are to get stuff like drive bays and slots. But that's my preference, and I have big hands. Also, more room for fans if you don't use watercooling, extra airflow never hurts. Ever.
Optical bays are kinda of hard to find these days, as the assumption is that no one uses them anymore. The standard has certainly changed and most companies opt for digital delivery of stuff, but it's also not hard to acquire an external USB bay or external drive too. And I say this as a guy whom only recently ditched his CD-rw, despite not having used it in years.
ALSO! Only one of those cases comes with a power supply, and the one that comes with is a 300 watt. You will need a bigger power supply. Especially since this is going to be a gaming rig and GPUs are complete and utter HOGS. Get a nice 750 or 800 in platinum or titanium (those are ratings, not metals.) and you'll never have to worry about releasing the magic blue smoke.