G.Skill announced in its recent press release that four "extreme" overclockers have made history in the industry as they achieved a new threshold in the practice and set new records of 12,000MT/s ...
Are you up for a challenge? Go hunt down a 128GB (2x64GB) memory kit in the DDR5-8000 range. Take your time, we'll wait. What's that, you couldn't find one? That's because they haven't existed until ...
Use left and right arrow keys to seek audio. G.SKILL has been working closely with the ASUS ROG team to find the overclocking potential of the new DDR5 CAMM2 memory form factor, reaching a new ...
Mark our words, this will be the year that we'll finally see a DDR5-10000 (or faster) memory kit offered at retail. It's only a matter of time, especially now that Clock Unbuffered Dual Inline Memory ...
G.Skill has finally given DDR5 memory the royal treatment by launching its much-anticipated Trident Z5 Royal version. The company says the Z5 Royal will represent the apex of its DDR5 lineup, offering ...
Asus overclocker Safedisk gets all the best toys. This time around, Asus and G.Skill gave Safedisk an Asus ROG Crosshair X870E Apex motherboard, an AMD Ryzen 5 8500G CPU and a 48GB kit of DDR5 G.Skill ...
Newegg has started selling G.Skill’s Trident Z5 NeoX memory kits featuring AMD ULL technology, and the prices are already ...
Summary: G.Skill has announced two new memory kits aimed at enthusiast-level PC users and gamers, touting extremely high-capacity and incredibly fast speeds. One memory kit is comprised of 128GB, ...
Use left and right arrow keys to seek audio. As with every year, G.Skill has some incredible memory kits on display at Computex, and Computex 2023 was no different, with the company showcasing its ...
G.SKILL, the popular high-performance memory chip maker, has just introduced its new DDR5-6400 CL30 memory kits. These latest flagship memory chips can reach DDR5-6400 CL30-39-39-102 speeds and have ...
.SKILL is showcasing some of the most ambitious DDR5 memory demonstrations seen at Computex 2026, ranging from record-breaking overclocked frequencies to enormous workstation-class memory capacities.