- Cyber Security
Multi-Factor Authentication and Cyber Essentials Plus Requirements
25 Jun, 2026







£464.05 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
If you’re paying **£386.65 ex‑VAT for a 32GB (2x16GB) DDR4 RGB kit**, I’m going to be blunt: that’s not “Kingston premium” money—it’s **out of whack for DDR4 in 2026**. DDR4 prices have been soft for a while, and unless you’ve got a very specific reason to go RGB (mostly aesthetic or brand-matched builds), you can usually get comparable performance with cheaper non‑RGB sticks from reputable suppliers. For business systems—accounting PCs, CAD workstations that don’t need eye-candy, VDI hosts—RGB just isn’t a value driver.
Who *might* buy this: teams building gaming-style desktops, small offices with a “showy” workstation standard, or anyone who specifically wants Kingston’s Renegade line and prefers buying from a familiar brand to reduce compatibility drama. Who shouldn’t: anyone building cost-conscious infrastructure or running mixed-use servers—**DDR4 at this price is a hard sell** when you can often redirect budget to something that actually moves the needle (storage, CPU platform, or higher RAM capacity on a better-generation platform). If you tell me what system/CPU you’re targeting and whether RGB is genuinely required, I can give you a more practical “buy vs don’t buy” call.

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