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£372.43 inc. VAT
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For £310.28 ex-VAT, this Kingston FURY Beast 32GB DDR4 RGB is… hard to justify unless you specifically want the RGB and you’ve already confirmed your platform is genuinely DDR4 3600 compatible. In the real world, adding 32GB tends to be about smoothing multi-tasking and keeping heavy apps from paging to disk — but performance uplift is often less dramatic than people expect, and DDR4 “speed” only really shows when your workload is memory-sensitive (or when you’re doing something genuinely throughput-heavy). If you’re gaming, most mainstream setups won’t feel the difference in a way that matches the cost.
That said, it can be a sensible buy for a workstation or serious productivity box where you know you’ll benefit from the extra headroom (VMs, virtualization, big spreadsheets, photo/video workflows), and you like having tidy, matched modules for stability. If you don’t care about RGB (and you can get non-RGB kits for meaningfully less), I’d lean that way — the “Beast” name gets you reliability and good behaviour, but the lighting is where a lot of the premium tends to go. Also make sure your motherboard supports DDR4 3600 at the timings you’re expecting; otherwise you’ll end up running lower than advertised, and then you’ve essentially paid extra for nothing.

Kingston
Kingston FURY Beast RGB - DDR5 - kit - 64 GB: 4 x 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 5200 MT/s / PC5-41600 - CL40 - 1.25 V - unbuffered - ECC - white

Kingston
Kingston FURY Renegade - DDR5 - kit - 64 GB: 2 x 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 6400 MT/s / PC5-51200 - 1.1 V - unbuffered - on-die ECC - white, silver

Kingston
Kingston - DDR4 - module - 16 GB - SO-DIMM 260-pin - 3200 MHz / PC4-25600 - CL22 - 1.2 V - unbuffered - ECC - for Dell Precision 5760, 7560

Kingston
Kingston FURY Renegade - DDR5 - kit - 32 GB: 2 x 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 7600 MT/s / PC5-60800 - CL38 - 1.45 V - unbuffered - on-die ECC - white, silver