ASUS ROG already sells gaming laptops, monitors, motherboards, GPUs, coolers, PSUs, routers, keyboards, and pretty much half the average enthusiast setup at this point. So when leaks surfaced late last year suggesting the company was preparing its own DDR5 RAM, it honestly felt inevitable, especially with premium memory prices continuing to climb. Now, ASUS has officially made it real with the launch of the ROG DDR5 RGB Edition 20 as part of its ongoing 20th anniversary celebrations.
ASUS ROG’s first DDR5 kit is ridiculously premium in every possible way
The new kit comes in a 2x24GB configuration for a total of 48GB capacity, running at DDR5-6000 speeds with extremely tight CL26-36-36-76 timings. ASUS is reportedly using SK hynix M-die chips, which are already popular among memory overclocking enthusiasts.
ASUS has also added a special “ROG Mode” exclusive to compatible ROG motherboards, allowing users to push the memory kit to DDR5-8000 with 36-48-48-110 timings at a DRAM voltage of 1.40V, directly through the BIOS. The modules feature aggressive RGB-heavy styling with aluminum heatsinks and Aura Sync support, because of course they do. The only slightly painful part is the pricing. Reports suggest the kit could cost around 5,999 yuan in China, which converts to nearly $900.
At this point, ASUS ROG wants to sell gamers an entire personality
This launch honestly feels like the perfect example of where the PC hardware industry is headed right now. Brands no longer just want to sell individual components. They want gamers fully locked into ecosystems where the motherboard, GPU, cooler, monitor, peripherals, and now even the RAM all share the same logo, RGB software, and aesthetic language. The “full ROG setup” dream is clearly very real at ASUS HQ.
The slightly awkward part is the pricing. This RAM kit alone reportedly costs close to what an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti goes for in today’s market, which is honestly wild to think about. For significantly less money, buyers can already grab high-end kits like the G.Skill Trident Z5 Neo RGB, although the tighter CL26 timings on ASUS’ kit do give it some proper enthusiast credibility beyond just looking expensive for the sake of it.
Still, from ASUS ROG’s perspective, this move makes complete sense. If someone is already building a heavily customized ROG-themed battlestation, convincing them to buy matching RGB memory probably is not the hardest sell in the world, especially when the kit genuinely looks premium and performs well, too. Then again, all of this also strengthens the case for simply buying a pre-built gaming PC instead of chasing individual components piece by piece.