ADATA XPG Lancer Blade 6000MT/s DDR5
Introduction
Introduction
Memory, one of those things in life that we never get enough of. Perhaps it’s our age. Fortunately if there is a boon to our lack of short term memory it’s being able to forget current RAM prices. Blimey. You would imagine that right now is the worst possible time to even consider DDR5 kits, much less launch new ones. Although if you subscribe to this philosophy then we’d like to ask if you’ve ever gone window-shopping. Because we know our wishlist is full of things we can’t afford. We’ve all perused estate agents sorting by price. So just because we haven’t the money today, doesn’t mean that’ll always be the case.
Thankfully whilst prices may fluctuate, quality is forever. Much like the aforementioned window shopping example, AI farms can’t drive prices up forever. Sooner or later we’ll be back in the realms of memory kits for the person on the street. That’s where this comes in.
Should you ever find yourself writing a list of components, you will be aware that memory is pretty vanilla. It tends, and we’re speaking in massive generalisations, to be so dull as to be not worth noticing. Or so glitzy and large that it’s almost shouting. Heck we’re pretty sure that it won’t be long until some company or other builds a quad-stick kit with screens across them. What it’s hard to do is find one which ticks your aesthetic boxes.
Enter ADATA XPG and their Lancer Blade range of memory kits. Available in black and white, as well as with RGB lightbars or the simplicity of no lighting at all, aesthetically they are on point. What we especially enjoy is the capacity and speed possibilities. To that end we’ve a couple to show you today, a black RGB option, and the white, Tom-approved non-RGB one. Let’s take a look.

