Thursday, May 16th 2024

G.SKILL Launches Ripjaws M5 RGB Series DDR5 High-Performance Memory

G.SKILL International Enterprise Co., Ltd., the world's leading brand of performance overclock memory and PC components, is announcing the release of Ripjaws M5 RGB, a high-performance RGB DDR5 memory series designed for the latest DDR5-enabled Intel platforms. At launch, initial specifications will be offered up to DDR5-6400 CL32-39-39-102 96 GB (2x48GB). Available in matte black or matte white aluminium heatspreaders and features customizable RGB lighting, the Ripjaws M5 RGB is an ideal memory kit for a wide variety of PC builds and themes.

Designed for Stylish Performance
Available in matte white or matte black aluminium heatspreaders and standing at 41 mm tall, the Ripjaws M5 RGB series is designed for a minimalistic look and features customizable RGB lighting to match a wide variety of PC build themes.
Experience High Performance DDR5
Designed for high-speed DDR5 performance and constructed with high-screened ICs, Ripjaws M5 RGB offers overclocked specifications in a variety of speeds, timings, and kit capacity configurations - up to DDR5-6400 CL32-39-39-102 96 GBB (2x48GB) - making this an ideal choice for performance PC builds. For a list of launch specifications, please refer to the table below.

Intel XMP 3.0 Profile Support and Availability
Ripjaws M5 RGB comes with Intel XMP 3.0 memory overclock profile support, which allow users to overclock the memory kit by simply enabling XMP in the BIOS with a compatible motherboard and processor. This new memory series will roll out to G.SKILL authorized distribution partners starting May 2024.
Source: G.Skill
Add your own comment

6 Comments on G.SKILL Launches Ripjaws M5 RGB Series DDR5 High-Performance Memory

#1
_Under2World_
I do like what I see, all I want is my upgrade to keep the same latency CL16 4000mhz. Could we finally get CL32 8000mhz.
Posted on Reply
#2
overclockedamd
Hmmm odd as 6400 is the rumored new sweet spot for new Ryzen line but no EXPO.
Posted on Reply
#3
Sabishii Hito
_Under2World_I do like what I see, all I want is my upgrade to keep the same latency CL16 4000mhz. Could we finally get CL32 8000mhz.
Run upwards of 1.6v on some good Hynix-based DDR5 and you might be able to. Not that CL means much anymore.
Posted on Reply
#4
Random_User
Don't get me wrong. It definitely looks better than Trident Z DDR5, and may perform not any worse. But the entire point of Ripjaws and Flare X was in absence of RGB, and low height design.
Posted on Reply
#5
Bobaganoosh
Random_UserDon't get me wrong. It definitely looks better than Trident Z DDR5, and may perform not any worse. But the entire point of Ripjaws and Flare X was in absence of RGB, and low height design.
Exactly!

Trident Z is supposed to be the flashy (RGB) stuff, the Ripjaws were one of the last remaining simple sets of RAM. I wish there were more options for top performance DIMMs that just had fully functional (and lower height without RGB) heatsinks and not marketing "GAMER" RGB fluff. It seemed smart to have the different options, but I don't see what now sets this apart.
Posted on Reply
#6
Sabishii Hito
BobaganooshExactly!

Trident Z is supposed to be the flashy (RGB) stuff, the Ripjaws were one of the last remaining simple sets of RAM. I wish there were more options for top performance DIMMs that just had fully functional (and lower height without RGB) heatsinks and not marketing "GAMER" RGB fluff. It seemed smart to have the different options, but I don't see what now sets this apart.
Well, there's always the TeamGroup Xtreem sticks. Nice black functional heatsinks with no RGB.
Posted on Reply
Jun 12th, 2024 12:47 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts