Home / Channel / Computex / Computex 2024: G.Skill shows off new DDR5-10600 memory and Project Alpha case

Computex 2024: G.Skill shows off new DDR5-10600 memory and Project Alpha case

At Computex this week, we had the opportunity to catch up with the team at G.Skill. The company is well known for its high-speed and overclock-friendly memory modules, and that hasn't changed during the transition to DDR5, with 10,600MT/s memory now on the way. 

At a benchmarking station, we spotted the new G.Skill Trident Z5 Royal memory, running at 8200MT/s, compared with a system running G.Skill Ripjaws S5 DDR5-5200 memory. For AI tasks, this demonstrated the value of running higher speed memory, with a significant 15% performance boost just coming from the memory.

If you thought DDR5-8200 was fast then just wait, as G.Skill also has DDR5-10600 on the way, a monstrous speed, especially for memory that is passively cooled.

As usual, G.Skill also had some wild modded systems on display here, including a demon skull with a split-open globe housing the PC hardware, an ED-209 style Mech PC and a liquid-cooled build with moving parts.

One of G.Skill's new prototypes is Project Alpha, a concept case with a distinctive shape. It offers a huge amount of space for hardware, but thanks to the materials being used, it should be lighter than many cases of this size, and there is a lot of room for airflow too.

KitGuru Says: What do you think of G.Skill's latest here at Computex? Which of the modded PCs was your favourite? 

Become a Patron!

Check Also

PlayStation PC

PlayStation CEO seemingly confirms Sony’s return to exclusivity

For a few years, Sony had been porting over many of its single-player PlayStation 5 games to PC at an increasing rate. This seemed to stop rather suddenly, with the most recent addition being The Last of Us Part II back in early 2025. With rumours claiming that Sony has reversed-course on bringing more single-player titles to PC, PlayStation’s CEO has now officially commented on the matter.