- Internet & Connectivity
Understanding Dark Fibre and Its Business Applications
18 Mar, 2026







£1091.24 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
Honestly, this is an easy “yes” if you’re building a high-spec DDR5 rig for gaming or serious work and you actually want the look + stable “plug it in and go” vibes. Kingston’s Fury Beast kits are usually solid on compatibility and, in day-to-day use, you shouldn’t be fighting memory training or weird boot behaviour. The RGB is also genuinely a bonus rather than just marketing—if your case is visible, it’ll look good and you won’t have to hunt for another lighting solution. For UK buyers using EXPO platforms, the kit choice makes sense when you want predictable speeds without paying for premium brands that don’t really perform better.
But £799.78 ex-VAT for a 128GB-class kit is the part that makes me hesitate. That’s heavy money for RAM, and unless you’re in a workflow that’s actually eating that capacity (big VMs, large datasets, heavy rendering, multi-user dev/testing labs, etc.), you’ll likely get more value by buying less capacity or shopping for a more competitively priced DDR5 kit and allocating budget elsewhere (CPU, NVMe, GPU, or even cooling if you’re pushing sustained workloads). If this is for a normal office/IT stack, it’s basically overkill—great RAM, wrong spend. If you tell me your intended workload and platform (CPU/mobo), I can say whether it’s a smart buy or just a costly flex.

Kingston
Kingston FURY Renegade Pro - DDR5 - kit - 64 GB: 4 x 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 5600 MT/s / PC5-44800 - CL28 - 1.35 V - registered - on-die ECC - black

Kingston
Kingston - DDR4 - module - 16 GB - SO-DIMM 260-pin - 3200 MHz / PC4-25600 - CL22 - 1.2 V - unbuffered - ECC - for Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 4 20Y3, 20Y4

Kingston
Kingston - DDR5 - module - 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 5600 MHz / PC5-44800 - CL46 - 1.1 V - registered - ECC

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