Leven 8GB DDR4 3200MHz RGB Gaming Desktop RAM
Ramp up your gaming experience by installing the Leven 8GB DDR4 3200MHz Gaming Desktop Memory Kit into your desktop computer. Featuring a low-profile design for small form factor systems, RGB LED lights, and black anodized aluminum heatsinks, this 8GB memory kit includes 1x 8GB 288-pin DDR4-3200 MHz non-ECC unbuffered DIMMs (UDIMM) to help drive your games and applications. Increased memory will help complex games and large files load faster. The extra space also allows you to run demanding applications, multitask, and edit large photos and videos more efficiently. This memory kit has 16-18-18-38-2N latency timings, a 1.35V voltage requirement, and is tested to work with both AMD and Intel motherboards. It also includes XMP 2.0 support, which allows for easy overclocking for even higher performance. This memory module is protected by a lifetime warranty.
Leven 8GB DDR4 3200MHz RGB Gaming Desktop RAM Review
Whether you’re building a new PC or upgrading an existing system that was once one of the best gaming PCs but now struggles to tackle today’s games, the best RAM kit for your money depends on the platform you pick and the type of workloads that you plan to run. Every modern desktop system has utilized DDR4 RAM and supports the baseline DDR4-2133 data rate in recent years. Now, that’s the easy part.
Leven 8GB DDR4 3200MHz hard part is evaluating whether faster memory has a noticeable impact on your system when choosing the best RAM. For example, if you’re running an Intel system with one of the best graphics cards, most programs won’t respond in a meaningful way to faster or slower system memory. On the other hand, some workloads will scale well with higher data rates, including some games and software. For example, file compression programs love fast memory, such as 7-Zip or WinRAR.
On the other hand, AMD’s Zen-powered processors benefit more from higher memory frequencies. The company’s “Infinity Fabric” (the internal bits that link various logic blocks inside Ryzen CPUs) matches the memory bus’s speed. You can read about this in detail here. Increased memory speeds on Ryzen-and Threadripper-based platforms often translate to real-world performance gains. In games, that means higher frame rates at mainstream resolutions like 1080p (1920 x 1080) and a smoother performance at higher resolutions. But the number of extra frames you get with faster RAM will vary significantly from one title to another. So some games are just more GPU-bound.
Lastly, memory speed makes a big difference if you’re gaming with integrated graphics, whether an Intel or AMD processor (you can see how they stack up in our CPU Benchmark Hierarchy). The graphics engine that’s baked into most best CPUs for Gaming doesn’t generally have its dedicated memory (as discrete graphics cards do). Turning up the clock rate of your system memory also generally increases performance (again, the performance uplift varies significantly from game to game). Therefore, the best RAM for those systems is faster memory if mainstream gaming is essential to you. If you have to pay top dollar for the fastest RAM to get playable frame rates, you’re better off buying slower system memory and a discrete graphics card.
In short, the best RAM for you is faster memory if you’re gaming without a dedicated graphics card, running an AMD Ryzen system, and in some isolated scenarios with Intel chips. But if you don’t care about squeezing the best performance possible out of your hardware, DDR4-2133 memory should be drop-in compatible with any modern Intel or AMD PC platform and DDR5-4800 for Intel Alder Lake CPUs.
Specification:
Specification |
|
Features |
|
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.