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AMD EXPO Certified DDR5 joins Kingston FURY lineup

Kingston FURY, Kingston Technology’s gaming division, has released two AMD-compatible DDR5 modules: the Beast DDR5 AM5 and the Beast DDR5 AM5 RGB.

To give gamers and PC enthusiasts the most up-to-date available alternatives, Kingston has developed new gaming memory that is optimized for AMD’s most recent AM5 platform. Users can achieve aggressive speeds of up to 6,000MT/s1 without additional tuning if they use the Kingston FURY Beast DDR5 AM5 memory, which now comes equipped with AMD EXtended Profile for Overclocking and provides an easy overclock solution. The memory comes with two factory-tuned profiles and one that the user can customize.

The world’s top motherboard makers qualify Kingston’s FURY Beast memory. It boasts a bold low-profile heat spreader, on-die ECC (ODECC) for stability at high speeds, and on-module Power Management Integrated Circuits (PMIC) for power distribution. Kingston FURY Beast DDR5 RAM boosts performance and style for hardcore gaming, 4K+ live streaming, and 3D rendering.

Related: How to Check RAM DDR Type on Windows (5 Effective Ways)

Kingston boasts that they are the most prominent provider of DRAM modules worldwide and are constantly working to provide their clients with cutting-edge innovations and superior quality. Users may rest assured that the Kingston FURY Beast DDR5 AM5 RAM will provide their AMD AM5 system with the performance and reliability required.

The Kingston FURY Beast product range offers two overclocking profile options using Intel® XMP and AMD EXPO technologies. The AMD EXPO-certified Kingston FURY Beast DDR5 and Kingston FURY Beast DDR5 RGB are now available in 16GB single modules and 32GB kits of 2, featuring an orange AMD EXPO sticker on the exterior package to help customers identify the memory. All Kingston FURY memory products come with a lifetime guarantee and the famed Kingston dependability.


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  1. jalah93190 says:

    It is really nice to see that hitting those 6,000MT/s speeds is basically plug-and-play now with the AMD EXPO profiles. I remember the early days of DDR5 where stability was a bit of a coin toss, so having factory-tuned profiles specifically for AM5 is a huge plus.
    I’ve been slightly out of the loop on desktop hardware recently because I’ve been deep in my home lab infrastructure—mostly wrestling with installing a new 6-port network expansion module https://serverorbit.com/network-devices/network-expansion-modules/6-port-en to physically separate my traffic zones. It’s funny how we chase bandwidth in different ways; on the server side, I just need more pipes, but on the desktop, that raw memory speed makes such a difference for responsiveness.
    For those who have already made the jump to AM5, are you finding that 6000MT/s is the “sweet spot” for stability and price, or is there still benefit in pushing for higher frequencies if you aren’t doing heavy rendering?

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