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How to Plan a Tenant-to-Tenant Microsoft 365 Migration
16 Mar, 2026







£537.83 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £393.42 ex-VAT, this Kingston FURY Beast DDR5 kit feels pretty steep for what it is: fast-enough, “nice-looking” RAM with XMP support and RGB. In real office/B2B deployments you’re usually paying for stability and predictable performance under load, and DDR5 at this tier can absolutely do that—but the value only really lands if your workloads are memory-sensitive *and* you’re building around a platform that benefits from higher-speed DDR5 rather than just “any decent DDR5 will do.” If you’re upgrading a standard workstation for Office/VMs/light dev, I’d be wary: you’ll rarely see a meaningful return versus a cheaper kit that hits the same practical stability goals.
Who it *does* suit: creative workstations, media pipelines, CAD/engineering stacks, or servers/workstations where you’re pushing workloads that genuinely use memory bandwidth—and you also care about having the same “FURY Beast” ecosystem (and the XMP profile) across builds. If you’re cost-controlling across multiple machines, I’d usually look for less brand-premium and spend the difference on storage/CPU/GPU—those tend to deliver more measurable business impact. Also, the white RGB isn’t the point for most UK business environments, so if aesthetics aren’t a requirement, you’re paying for lights you won’t use.

Kingston
Kingston FURY Beast - DDR5 - module - 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 6000 MT/s / PC5-48000 - CL36 - 1.35 V - unbuffered - on-die ECC - white

Kingston
Kingston - DDR4 - module - 64 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 3200 MHz / PC4-25600 - CL22 - 1.2 V - registered - ECC - for Lenovo ThinkStation P620

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 FURY Beast - DDR5 - kit - 32 GB: 2 x 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 5600 MT/s / PC5-44800 - CL40 - 1.25 V - unbuffered - on-die ECC - black