Corsair Is Attacking Race To DDR5-10000 Memory With A Vengeance

Closeup of a mirror-reflective Corsair Vengeance DDR5 memory module in a motherboard.
There have been several developments in the DDR5 memory space over the past week and slightly beyond, such as G.Skill unveiling its sleek and fast Trident Z5 CK DDR5-9600 memory for Arrow Lake, and both G.Skill and Kingston jockeying for the fastest overclocked DDR5 frequency. If that’s not enough to get you stoked over this new era of CU-DIMMs, then perhaps this well be—Corsair has taken to X/Twitter to tease what could end up being the first retail DDR5-10000 memory kit.
We’ve been hearing about the coveted DDR5-10000 milestone ever since DDR5 first burst onto the scene, but as of yet, no company has actually released a memory kit at that speed. It’s going to happen, though, and probably soon. The reason is because memory makers have started adopting an on-device clock driver (CKD).

This entails a tiny integrated circuit (IC) that sits directly on a module’s printed circuit board (PCB). It’s responsible for generating the memory’s clock signal, and these CU-DIMMs, or Clock Unbuffered Dual Inline Modules, are more stable at higher frequencies. This in turn is allowing memory makers to reach new heights, and DDR5-10000 is the next big hurdle.

CPU-Z screenshots showing Corsair's Vengeance DDR5 memory at DDR5-10000.

Corsair is already there, apparently, as evidenced by several screenshots and a short video posted to X/Twitter. The company showed off several CPU-Z screenshots, which touts an upcoming Vengeance kit with an Intel XMP profile for DDR5-10000. According to the screenshots, the blistering-fast memory sports default timings of 48-60-60-157.

A separate CPU-Z window (click to enlarge the above image for the full screenshot, or see the embedded X/Twitter post below) shows Corsair running the RAM at DDR5-10000 with timings set at 48-30-80-79. This was achieved with an ASRock Z890 Taichi OCF motherboard running Intel’s Core Ultra 7 265K processor based on Arrow Lake.

You can bet that other memory makers are frantically validating DDR5-10000 memory kits of their own, in a race to be first to retail. They’ll have to be fast, though—Corsair says we can expect its DDR5-10000 Vengeance modules to release in “early November.”