- Azure Cloud
Understanding Azure Pricing: Pay-As-You-Go vs Reserved Instances
11 Mar, 2026







£337.32 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
Kingston’s FURY Beast 32GB DDR4 kit is a solid “get reliable RAM and move on” pick. For a lot of UK SMB and office workloads—general multitasking, light virtualisation, dev boxes, admin servers that aren’t RAM-hungry—this kind of straightforward, mainstream kit tends to be good value because it’s unlikely to be a headache. The price (about £281 ex-VAT) feels a bit premium *for DDR4 in 2026*, though, so I’d only buy it if your platform genuinely can’t move to DDR5 and you want something trustworthy without gambling on oddball brands or timings.
Who should buy: businesses building or upgrading DDR4 workstations/VM hosts where stability matters more than squeezing out benchmark bragging rights. Who should think twice: if you’re buying for brand-new builds today, DDR4 at this price is hard to justify—there’s usually a better long-term plan if you can go DDR5 (and many motherboards will already be geared that way). Also, double-check you actually need 64GB total before dropping cash; many teams don’t, and you’ll get more tangible gains from an SSD/storage upgrade or CPU platform refresh than from overbuying memory.

Kingston
Kingston FURY Beast - DDR4 - kit - 64 GB: 4 x 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 3600 MT/s / PC4-28800 - CL18 - 1.35 V - unbuffered - non-ECC - black

Qnap
QNAP - S0 version - DDR4 - module - 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 2666 MHz / PC4-21300 - 1.2 V - unbuffered - ECC

Lenovo
Lenovo TruDDR5 - DDR5 - module - 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 4800 MT/s / PC5-38400 - unbuffered - ECC - for ThinkSystem SR250 V3, ST250 V3, ST50 V3

Kingston
Kingston FURY Renegade RGB - DDR4 - kit - 16 GB: 2 x 8 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 3200 MT/s / PC4-25600 - CL16 - 1.2 V - unbuffered - non-ECC - black