For Zen and Zen+, Ryzen users were stuck using a handful of DDR4 3200 kits for best performance. Ryzen 3000 and 5000 have better memory controllers and better support from memory manufactures. The particular kit caught my eye because it's 3600MHz with tight 16-16-16-36 timings. Some video games out there are really sensitive to RAM speeds, so aren't, but for me, I gained over 10fps in Fallout 76 when I upgraded from a slower Team kit. CL14 3600MHz is pricey, so 3600 CL16 was a nice middle ground. I've had zero issues with the kit I bought, and it's nice to know there's a lifetime warranty offered on these sticks too. One gripe I have about these RGB kits is that the LEDs are always falling out of sync on each stick, and I've never found a way to fix that. Occasionally the RBG software resets the LEDs so they're in sync again, but that only lasts a few seconds until the next reset... DDR4 wasn't designed with addressable RGB on memory in mind, so it can't be perfect. If your motherboard has RGB software, I advise using that over the G.Skill RGB software - attempting to use them together just messes with the LEDs, so one or the other. My other gripe is that users have to enter the UEFI (BIOS) and manually select the XMP profile on for the RAM, otherwise it'll default down to DDR4 2100. Simple for techies, but most people would just see their computer being slow and get mad.Read full review
Verified purchase: No
Amazing product, works flawlessly, fast and RGB is great
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
Current slide {CURRENT_SLIDE} of {TOTAL_SLIDES}- Best Selling in Memory (RAM)
Current slide {CURRENT_SLIDE} of {TOTAL_SLIDES}- Save on Memory (RAM)