Tuesday, November 8th 2022

Gigabyte and Team Group Goes DDR5-8000 XMP on Z790 Motherboards

Press Release
GIGABYTE TECHNOLOGY Co. Ltd, a leading manufacturer of motherboards, graphics cards, and hardware solutions, today revealed the supreme performance of XMP DDR5-8000 on Z790 AORUS XTREME and Z790 AORUS MASTER motherboards with Team Group gaming modules T-FORCE DELTA RGB DDR5 memory. Enhanced with the exclusive Low Latency and High Bandwidth technology, this achievement proves again that GIGABYTE motherboard is the ultimate choice to unleash memory performance, as well as the leading role of memory performance by the teamwork of GIGABYTE vs. Team Group.

It's always been challenging to constantly exceed the high-frequency record of memory, and stable motherboards and high-performance memories make a perfect team to accomplish this difficult task. To provide superior performance and user experience, GIGABYTE has been working closely with Team Group on the record-breaking performance from DDR5-7600, DDR-7800, to XMP DDR5 8000. The detailed memory information is listed in the memory support list of the motherboard, users can check on the site for the best performance matrix on the Z790 platform.

Meanwhile, GIGABYTE's exclusive Low Latency and High Bandwidth features can further raise total bandwidth while reducing latency on XMP memories to provide superior memory performance without changing the memory clock. Enhanced with the new generation Shielded Memory Routing and low signal-loss PCB design, the internal and external signal loss or interference are effectively reduced to ensure blasting-fast DDR5 memory speed and lead to the breakthrough performance of XMP DDR5-8000 with T-FORCE DELTA RGB DDR5.

In addition, the top-quality materials and features of Z790 AORUS XTREME and Z790 AORUS MASTER provide a perfect platform for T-FORCE DELTA RGB DDR5 memory to achieve the phenomenal performance of XMP DDR5-8000. By simply using the XMP option in the BIOS setting, users can now set milestones of memory performance with minimum effort on memory overclocking.
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