Home ConsumerClient Accessories Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 Review

Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 Review

by Charles P. Jefferies

DDR5 memory is now available in mainstream PCs thanks to Intel’s 12th generation Core and AMD’s Ryzen 6000 chips. In this review, we look at a high-performance Kingston Fury Beast DDR5 desktop memory kit rated to run at 5200MHz, comparing it to other DDR5-5200 kits and benchmarking it at DDR5-4800 to see whether DDR5-5200 is worth extra money.

DDR5 memory is now available in mainstream PCs thanks to Intel’s 12th generation Core and AMD’s Ryzen 6000 chips. In this review, we look at a high-performance Kingston Fury Beast DDR5 desktop memory kit rated to run at 5200MHz, comparing it to other DDR5-5200 kits and benchmarking it at DDR5-4800 to see whether DDR5-5200 is worth extra money.

Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 Specifications

DDR5 debuted in 2021 as the replacement for DDR4, which had been the mainstream standard since 2015. Higher performance is one of DDR5’s largest advantages; frequencies start at DDR5-4800 next to DDR4’s official maximum of DDR4-3200 for a 50% increase in bandwidth. DDR5 also promises lower power consumption, requiring 1.1V down from DDR4’s 1.2V.

Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 DIMMs

The Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 desktop memory kit under review here is for high-performance applications, including gaming. The 32GB kit we’re reviewing includes two 16GB DIMMs. It goes for $303 on Amazon and was hard to find elsewhere; DDR5 isn’t being produced in huge quantities just yet. Nonetheless, it’s competitively priced with Corsair Vengeance ($343 on Newegg) and XPG Lancer ($327). The price will still come as a shock if you’re used to DDR4 prices; a 32GB DDR4-3200 kit can be had for around $120.

The Fury Beast modules themselves have an aggressive yet not unprofessional look. The 288-pin DIMMs are covered in black anodized aluminum heat spreaders to keep them cool. They feel well-made and are just as easy to install as DDR4 modules.

Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 DIMM Back

These modules don’t have RGB lighting. Though Kingston offered RGB-infused DDR4 memory, it doesn’t yet offer DDR5 with RGB. This doesn’t really make us sad, but worth noting for those who are into the aesthetic.

The full specifications of the Kingston Fury Beast DDR5 are as follows.

Capacities
  • Singles: 8GB, 16GB, 32GB
  • Kits of 2: 16GB, 32GB, 64GB
Speeds 4800MT/s, 5200MT/s, 5600MT/s, 6000MT/s
Latencies CL38, CL40
Voltage 1.1V, 1.25V, 1.35V
DRAM Density 16Gbit
Intel XMP 3.0 Support Supported
Operating Temperature 0 to 85 deg. C
Dimensions 133.35 by 34.9 by 6.62mm

Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 Performance

We use our self-built StorageReview desktop to test DDR5 memory; its specifications are as follows:

The Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 kit under review is two 16GB modules (32GB total). For perspective, we benchmarked it at DDR5-4800 and DDR5-5200, with and without the XMP II profile engaged, using the following settings:

  • DDR5-4800 CL40-39-39-58 (no XMP)
  • DDR5-4800 CL38-38-38-57 (XMP II)
  • DDR5-5200 CL40-39-39-61 (no XMP)
  • DDR5-5200 CL40-40-40-61 (XMP II)

The XMP II timings at DDR5-5200 are slightly looser than they are at our motherboard’s default settings. That said, the timings are essentially the same between DDR5-4800 and DDR5-5200, so the effective latency should go down while operating at the higher frequency.

We are comparing the Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 memory to the following kits and settings:

It’s not exactly apples to apples, since we’re using different memory sizes and DIMM configurations. The Team Group T-Force Delta RGB memory shares our Kingston kit’s timings; the XPG Lancer RGB kit runs a little tighter. As for the Corsair Vengeance kit, it refused to boot at its rated DDR5-4400 speed without XMP II, so the base benchmarks for that kit are at a lowly DDR5-4000. Let’s start the testing.

SiSoftware Sandra 2021

We start with the popular SiSoftware Sandra 2021 suite. Higher numbers are better in all subtests. First, we’ll look at the kits running at DDR5-5200, with and without XMP II profiles engaged. The Corsair kit is excluded from this group since it can’t run at DDR5-5200.

Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 Team Group T-Force Delta RGB DDR5-5200 XPG Lancer RGB DDR5-5200
No XMP XMP II No XMP XMP II No XMP XMP II
Memory Bandwidth 62.758GB/s 61.811GB/s 62.352GB/s 62.243GB/s 62.560GB/s 62.945GB/s
Cache & Memory Latency 32.9ns 33.4ns 32.9ns 33.4ns 32.9ns 34.0ns
Cache & Memory Bandwidth 493.096GB/s 484.779GB/s 487.508GB/s 487.176GB/s 485.656GB/s 487.290GB/s
Overall Memory Score 2.48kPT 2.44kPT 2.46kPT 2.45kPT 2.46kPT 2.44kPT

The Kingston Fury Beast memory appears to perform better without XMP II off the bat, something that also happened with the XPG Lancer RGB kit, though we’ll see in the next test, 7-Zip, that that’s not a universal takeaway. Unsurprisingly, the Kingston Fury Beast and the Team Group T-Force Delta RGB kits performed even keel running at DDR5-5200 with XMP II.

Now for the Kingston Fury Beast’s performance running at the standard DDR5-4800 speeds and DDR5-4400 for the Corsair kit.

Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 (at DDR5-4800) Corsair Vengeance DDR5-4400
No XMP XMP II No XMP (DDR5-4000) XMP II (DDR5-4400)
Memory Bandwidth 54.418GB/s 58.801GB/s 52.654GB/s 54.403GB/s
Cache & Memory Latency 34.6ns 34.5ns 35.9ns 35.3ns
Cache & Memory Bandwidth 479.352GB/s 479.322GB/s 465.443GB/s 471.794GB/s
Overall Memory Score 2.35kPT 2.36kPT 2.23kPT 2.27kPT

At DDR5-4800, the Kingston Fury Beast kit enjoys a healthy performance boost and lower effective latency versus the Corsair kit running at DDR5-4400, especially with XMP II engaged. That said, the Kingston kit runs even better at DDR5-5200 in XMP II where it has better memory bandwidth (61.811GB/s versus 58.801GB/s) and still-lower latency (32.9ns versus 34.6ns).

7-Zip Compression Benchmark

The excellent 7-Zip file archive tool has a handy built-in compression benchmark. We ran 10 passes using a 128MB dictionary size and all 24 CPU threads of our Core i9-12900K; higher numbers are better. As with SiSoftware Sandra, we’ll look at the Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 kit against the other DDR5-5200 kits first.

Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 Team Group T-Force Delta RGB DDR5-5200 XPG Lancer RGB DDR5-5200
No XMP XMP II No XMP XMP II No XMP XMP II
Compressing
Current CPU Usage 2022% 2014% 2021% 2040% 2020% 2012%
Current Rating/Usage 4.846 GIPS 4.898 GIPS 4.878 GIPS 4.810 GIPS 4.914 GIPS 4.952 GIPS
Current Rating 97.977 GIPS 98.664 GIPS 98.558 GIPS 98.109 GIPS 99.263 GIPS 99.645 GIPS
Resulting CPU Usage 2024% 2017% 2025% 2023% 2021% 2022%
Resulting Rating/Usage 4.847 GIPS 4.855 GIPS 4.858 GIPS 4.850 GIPS 4.875 GIPS 4.908 GIPS
Resulting Rating 98.098 GIPS 97.934 GIPS 98.369 GIPS 98.142 GIPS 98.499 GIPS 99.257 GIPS
Decompressing
Current CPU Usage 2264% 2306% 2314% 2325% 2300% 2298%
Current Rating/Usage 5.764 GIPS 5.661 GIPS 5.839 GIPS 5.703 GIPS 5.856 GIPS 5.822 GIPS
Current Rating 130.510 GIPS 130.539 GIPS 135.102 GIPS 132.588 GIPS 134.663 GIPS 133.801 GIPS
Resulting CPU Usage 2276% 2298% 2304% 2300% 2300% 2292%
Resulting Rating/Usage 5.781 GIPS 5.737 GIPS 5.806 GIPS 5.776 GIPS 5.811 GIPS 5.774 GIPS
Resulting Rating 131.604 GIPS 131.818 GIPS 133.791 GIPS 132.838 GIPS 133.669 GIPS 132.347 GIPS
Total CPU Usage 2150% 2157% 2165% 2162% 2160% 2157%
Total Ratings
Total Rating/Usage 5.314 GIPS 5.296 GIPS 5.332 GIPS 5.313 GIPS 5.343 GIPS 5.341 GIPS
Total Rating 114.851 GIPS 114.876 GIPS 116.080 GIPS 115.490 GIPS 116.084 GIPS 115.082 GIPS

The differences in Total Ratings are so small (about one percent, at best) that it’s hard to declare a winner. The Kingston Fury Beast kit performs marginally better with XMP II engaged than without, though the opposite is true of the Team Group and XPG kits. That said, XMP II profiles are worth engaging if your memory supports them for stability reasons.

Now for the Fury Beast DDR5-5200 kit running at DDR5-4800 against Corsair Vengeance DDR5-4400.

Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 (at 4800) Corsair Vengeance DDR5-4400
No XMP XMP II No XMP (DDR5-4000) XMP II (DDR5-4400)
Compressing
Current CPU Usage 2035% 2016% 2001% 1996%
Current Rating/Usage 4.565 GIPS 4.595 GIPS 4.478 GIPS 4.583 GIPS
Current Rating 92.913 GIPS 92.664 GIPS 89.612 GIPS 91.460 GIPS
Resulting CPU Usage 2032% 2017% 1999% 2004%
Resulting Rating/Usage 4.601 GIPS 4.656 GIPS 4.401 GIPS 4.537 GIPS
Resulting Rating 93.468 GIPS 93.905 GIPS 87.978 GIPS 90.932 GIPS
Decompressing
Current CPU Usage 2278% 2319% 2307% 2296%
Current Rating/Usage 5.766 GIPS 5.700 GIPS 5.681 GIPS 5.702 GIPS
Current Rating 131.324 GIPS 132.166 GIPS 131.065 GIPS 130.922 GIPS
Resulting CPU Usage 2247% 2312% 2284% 2291%
Resulting Rating/Usage 5.744 GIPS 5.721 GIPS 5.701 GIPS 5.722 GIPS
Resulting Rating 129.050 GIPS 132.262 GIPS 130.237 GIPS 131.083 GIPS
Total Ratings
Total CPU Usage 2139% 2164% 2142% 2147%
Total Rating/Usage 5.172 GIPS 5.188 GIPS 5.051 GIPS 5.130 GIPS
Total Rating 111.259 GIPS 113.083 GIPS 109.108 GIPS 111.008 GIPS

The Kingston Fury Beast kit performed marginally better than the Corsair kit overall, though the compression numbers show a larger difference than the decompression numbers; for instance, the Kingston kit at DDR5-4800 (no XMP) had a resulting rating of 93.468 GIPS, 6% higher than the Corsair’s 87.978 GIPS running at DDR4-4000 (no XMP). This is also true for the Kingston kit when it runs at higher frequencies; with XMP II enabled, its compression rating jumps just over 4% from 93.905 GIPS in DDR5-4800 to 97.934 GIPS in DDR5-5200.

Conclusion

The Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 memory kit easily satisfied performance expectations. Though it wasn’t definitively faster than the DDR5-5200 kits we tested from Team Group and XPG (and we didn’t expect it to be since it’s not a low-latency kit), it does show performance advantages over the DDR5-4800 standard, especially in 7-Zip’s compression benchmark, and that’s enough to justify the DDR5-5200 kit’s increased cost versus the DDR5-4800 kit.

Kingston makes achieving DDR5-5200 easy thanks to its built-in Intel XMP profiles. We also like its aggressive aluminum heat spreaders. Overall, the Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-5200 memory kit gets our recommendation for use in a high-performance PC.

Engage with StorageReview

Newsletter | YouTube | Podcast iTunes/Spotify | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook | RSS Feed