- Network Admin
Cloud-Managed vs On-Premise Network Controllers
9 Oct, 2025







£1075.66 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £786.77 ex-VAT, you need a pretty specific reason to be buying Kingston Fury Beast 64GB DDR5 RGB. In day-to-day office workloads, VMs, collaboration tools, and general server-style multitasking, this kind of RAM is more “nice-to-have” than “must-have” — and the RGB doesn’t buy you anything operationally. Where it *can* make sense is if you’re already in a platform that genuinely benefits from higher-capacity DDR5 (lots of concurrent VMs, heavy spreadsheet/BI workloads, content pipelines, or serious workstation usage) and you’re trying to standardise performance across a fleet of builds.
That said, this is also the classic “paying a premium for branding and lighting” scenario. If you’re not building a workstation with a visible/managed aesthetic, you’ll usually get similar real-world performance from non-RGB kits (or from comparable value DDR5 options) without the markup. My advice: buy it if you’re confident you’ll keep the system busy enough to justify 64GB, and you *want* the Kingston ecosystem compatibility/certainty. Otherwise, for most UK B2B installs, I’d push you to spend that money on storage/CPU/extra cores first, or pick a cheaper non-RGB equivalent kit and bank the difference.

Qnap
QNAP - T0 version - DDR4 - module - 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 3200 MT/s / PC4-25600 - 1.2 V - registered - ECC

Kingston
Kingston FURY Renegade RGB - DDR5 - kit - 32 GB: 2 x 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 6400 MT/s / PC5-51200 - CL32 - 1.4 V - unbuffered - on-die ECC - white, silver

Kingston
Kingston Server Premier - DDR5 - module - 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 6400 MT/s - CL52 - 1.1 V - registered - ECC

Kingston
Kingston FURY Renegade RGB - DDR4 - kit - 128 GB: 4 x 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 3200 MT/s / PC4-25600 - CL16 - 1.2 V - unbuffered - non-ECC - black