Kingston came into COMPUTEX 2025 with a clear message; they’re not just supporting the AI future, they’re building it. Under the theme “Kingston Powers Tomorrow,” the booth was packed with high-performance memory and storage powering everything from AI servers to actual aerospace rockets.

The Kingston Future City exhibit was split into three zones — Intelligence Hub, FURY Acceleration Center, and the Creators Lab , where each showing a different side of what Kingston is doing with AI, gaming, and real-world tech challenges.

DC3000ME and Server Premier DDR5: For AI Servers That Don’t Slow Down

At the heart of Kingston’s Intelligence Hub was a GIGABYTE AI server rack loaded with DC3000ME PCIe 5.0 NVMe U.2 SSDs and Server Premier DDR5 memory. These drives hit up to 14,000MB/s read speeds and are optimized for low latency and high IOPS, perfect for AI workloads and real-time processing.

Kingston also showed off a live demo with Taiwan Intelligent Robotics Company (TIRC). Their inspection robots, used in industrial and remote environments, rely on Kingston memory and SSDs to collect and process large volumes of data on the fly. The SSDs are installed in both AI PCs and servers to support real-time analysis and fast response in safety-critical environments.

FURY Acceleration Center: Renegade G5 SSD and DDR5 at 8800MT/s

COMPUTEX 2025 Kingston 07

Gamers and enthusiasts weren’t left out either. The Kingston FURY Acceleration Center highlighted what’s possible on the client side. The spotlight was on the new FURY Renegade G5 PCIe 5.0 NVMe SSD, which pushes speeds up to 14,800MB/s read and 14,000MB/s write, easily one of the fastest drives on the show floor.

Alongside it was the FURY Renegade DDR5 CUDIMM, now available at up to 8800MT/s, and the compact FURY Impact DDR5 CAMM2, which now scales up to 128GB, offering a strong memory option for high-performance laptops and mobile workstations.

Creators Lab and RTET Rocket Demo: From SSDs to the Stratosphere

In the Creators Lab zone, Kingston partnered with the Rocket Technology Exploration Team (RTET) from NTUST and NFU to show off some actual aerospace hardware. A live display rocket featured a Kingston FURY Renegade G5 SSD inside its payload bay, used for real-time flight data capture.

On the ground, a high-end MSI PC powered by FURY Renegade DDR5 and the same G5 SSD handled simulation data, while a server setup featuring DC3000ME and Server Premier DDR5 took care of high-bandwidth data processing.

The lab also featured Kingston’s latest XS2000 external SSDs, the new DataTraveler Exodia S USB drive (up to 512GB), and refreshed Canvas Plus SD and microSD cards with faster speeds — all targeting creators, mobile pros, and anyone needing fast and reliable portable storage.

Product Spec Highlights

  • FURY Renegade G5 SSD: PCIe 5.0 NVMe, up to 14,800MB/s read and 14,000MB/s write, up to 4TB
  • DC3000ME SSD: PCIe 5.0 U.2 drive, up to 14,000MB/s read, 2.8M IOPS, capacities up to 15.36TB
  • FURY Renegade DDR5 CUDIMM: Speeds up to 8800MT/s, up to 96GB
  • FURY Impact DDR5 CAMM2: Now available up to 128GB
  • DataTraveler Exodia S: USB 3.2 Gen1, up to 512GB
  • Canvas Plus Cards: Updated for higher speeds in SD and microSD formats
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