Saturday, January 7th 2023

Kingston FURY Renegade DDR5-7200, FURY Beast DDR5-6000, and FURY Impact DDR5 Pictured

At the 2023 International CES, market leader Kingston expanded their FURY line of enthusiast-gaming PC memory with the introduction of several new DDR5 memory kits. The top-of-the-line FURY Renegade series comes in RGB and non-RGB trims, and with speeds of up to DDR5-7200 with Intel XMP 3.0 support. For the AMD crowd, the company showed off the FURY Beast RGB, which comes in speeds of up to DDR5-6000, and features AMD EXPO profiles along with extensive validation with Ryzen 7000 series processors.

For those still making the transition between DDR4 and DDR5, Kingston introduced the FURY Beast DDR4 RGB, which looks visually similar to their DDR5 FURY Beast, but comes with speeds of up to DDR4-3600, with validation on AMD Ryzen 5000 series processors. It also supports an Intel XMP 2.0 profile. For high-end gaming notebooks and SFF platforms, including the Intel NUC 12 Extreme, Kingston introduced the FURY Impact line of DDR5 SO-DIMM memory, which comes in speeds of up to DDR5-5600.
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7 Comments on Kingston FURY Renegade DDR5-7200, FURY Beast DDR5-6000, and FURY Impact DDR5 Pictured

#1
Chaitanya
One thing that's odd is the UI for RGB suggests only 2 steps available for brightness(10% or full) apart from switched off.
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#2
Nanochip
Kingston fury ctrl is the worst RGB software. It crashes, sometimes fails to work fails to program the RGB effect on the memory. Best to get GSkill or others.
Posted on Reply
#3
Ferrum Master
NanochipKingston fury ctrl is the worst RGB software. It crashes, sometimes fails to work fails to program the RGB effect on the memory. Best to get GSkill or others.
Why do you think GSkill is any better than other?

Use OpenRGB.
Posted on Reply
#4
Nanochip
Ferrum MasterWhy do you think GSkill is any better than other?

Use OpenRGB.
Experience. Fury ctrl is just bad. I haven’t had any major issues with GSkill. I’ll take the advice and check out openrgb.
Posted on Reply
#5
Ferrum Master
NanochipExperience. Fury ctrl is just bad. I haven’t had any major issues with GSkill. I’ll take the advice and check out openrgb.
Well I am angry on any of them because none of those work in Linux. At default they are NOT disabled but glow in puke rainbow. What is to be happy about any of them? They ALL SUCK EVENLY.

OpenRGB is cross platform and works on many devices, even Philips HUE, RAZER whatever... besides FanControlOpenRGB are the only programs I use, no Motherboard or RAM vendor crap software.
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#6
Nanochip
Ferrum MasterWell I am angry on any of them because none of those work in Linux. At default they are NOT disabled but glow in puke rainbow. What is to be happy about any of them? They ALL SUCK EVENLY.

OpenRGB is cross platform and works on many devices, even Philips HUE, RAZER whatever... besides FanControlOpenRGB are the only programs I use, no Motherboard or RAM vendor crap software.
I hate RGB puke too!

Corsair is the only one I know of that can program the RGB pattern on to the DIMM itself. The the dominator series for example you can program whatever RGB pattern you want and it will persist power cycles. You can remove the dimms and put them in another pc and the RGB pattern will remain. I am using ddr5 so GSkill has some very fast sticks with based on sk Hynix, with good timings, so I’m using them.
Posted on Reply
#7
thegnome
Ferrum MasterWhy do you think GSkill is any better than other?

Use OpenRGB.
Or SignalRGB, depends on which one works better with components.
Posted on Reply
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