Thursday, June 8th 2023

G.SKILL DDR5 Memory Achieves DDR5-11240 & Multiple Overclock Records During Computex 2023

G.SKILL International Enterprise Co., Ltd., the world's leading brand of performance overclock memory and PC components, is excited to announce that multiple overclock records were achieved during the Computex time frame, including the fastest DDR5 frequency record at DDR5-11240, using G.SKILL DDR5 memory and Intel platforms. This year during Computex time frame, the fastest DDR5 frequency world record was set by Seby9123, using the ASUS ROG Maximus Z790 Apex motherboard, Intel Core i9-13900KS, and G.SKILL DDR5 memory. For the overclock record submission on hwbot.org, please visit this page.

Thanks to the outstanding overclocking skills of the world's top extreme overclockers and the incredible performance of the top-notch hardware from Intel and performance motherboard vendors, several overclocking records were achieved in the Computex time frame. Refer to the table below for a list of overclock records achieved and hardware usage, including some benchmark categories whose record was broken more than once.
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11 Comments on G.SKILL DDR5 Memory Achieves DDR5-11240 & Multiple Overclock Records During Computex 2023

#1
bug
Was this an Intel CPU-only event?
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#2
Minus Infinity
Gosh we aren't far from seeing DDR5 13900 on a 13900K.
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#3
Count von Schwalbe
bugWas this an Intel CPU-only event?
I doubt it, de jure.

But good luck getting that on the chiplet-based Ryzen, and the others don't exist yet.
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#4
ZoneDymo
bugWas this an Intel CPU-only event?
idk but it does not really matter because even if it wasnt...it would have been.

my point is this is about memory speed, regardless of platform, so you just check which allows for the highest speed and go with that for the record.

I mean sure maybe they could have done a ryzen based record as well but that would have just then been a lower number, so who would care?
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#5
Daven
bugWas this an Intel CPU-only event?
Intel has hardened its products for CPU and memory clockspeeds. If you are into overclocking, Intel is the way to go.
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#6
bug
DavenIntel has hardened its products for CPU and memory clockspeeds. If you are into overclocking, Intel is the way to go.
I was under the impression AMD is ahead with their dedicated IO dies. Apparently not.
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#7
Arco
Didn't Linus steal I mean borrow CPUs and RAM?
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#8
Daven
bugI was under the impression AMD is ahead with their dedicated IO dies. Apparently not.
AMD is ahead in IGP, AVX512, performance per watt and gaming.
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#9
Icon Charlie
ArcoDidn't Linus steal I mean borrow CPUs and RAM?
You mean the strong and brave Sir Linus of Chickenville? Heh.
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#10
Wirko
Count von SchwalbeI doubt it, de jure.

But good luck getting that on the chiplet-based Ryzen, and the others don't exist yet.
A few Rembrandt-based mini PCs and notebooks exist that can take DDR5-4800 SODIMM modules. Not that those could win any overclocking records but the same chips can run LPDDR5 at 6400, so I'm sure someone will push them to the same or higher frequency with DDR5.
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#11
Count von Schwalbe
WirkoA few Rembrandt-based mini PCs and notebooks exist that can take DDR5-4800 SODIMM modules. Not that those could win any overclocking records but the same chips can run LPDDR5 at 6400, so I'm sure someone will push them to the same or higher frequency with DDR5.
I have yet to see any SODIMM win any OC records...

But yes, there are monolithic DDR5 Ryzens, but none yet for desktop.
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