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Review: Kingston HyperX Beast 32GB Kit (KHX24C11T3K4/32X)

by Tarinder Sandhu on 23 January 2013, 09:00 3.5

Tags: Kingston

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Final Thoughts and Rating

...Certainly a niche product for a small segment of the overall market, understand your usage pattern before contemplating dropping £240 on some high-capacity memory.

DDR3 memory has a comfort zone that's characterised by 8GB or 16GB packs running at 1,600MHz. Widely available and costing £30 and £60, respectively, the challenge for manufacturers who delve into the enthusiast end of the market is to encourage users to spend more.

Kingston's latest attempt at teasing some extra out of your budget is the HyperX Beast range. Outfitted with a nice-looking heatspreader but rather ungainly in overall appearance due to that green PCB, the standout feature is the large capacity - up to 64GB - and relatively high speeds.

Our reviewed 32GB kit makes little sense for the average user who, we believe, doesn't need more than 16GB in their machine. But run some heavy-duty Photoshop or other memory-intensive applications and the pack may pique interest. Certainly a niche product for a small segment of the overall market, understand your usage pattern before contemplating dropping £240 on some high-capacity memory.

The Good

Up to 64GB capacity
Solid performance in memory-intensive tasks

The Bad

Mid-level latencies; high operating voltage
Not intrinsically faster than cheaper memory

HEXUS Rating

3.5/5
Kingston HyperX Beast 32GB Kit
(KHX24C11T3K4/32X)

HEXUS Where2Buy

The reviewed Kingston HyperX Beast memory kit is available to purchase from Amazon UK.

HEXUS Right2Reply

At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.



HEXUS Forums :: 2 Comments

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Would be cool to see how it performs on x79, I hardly go above 1866, seems to be the sweetspot for power/price.
It would be mildly interesting to see how running multiple virtual clients would benefit from the different speeds of memory.

As usual, more is better but only if you can use it.