In the summer of 2021, HP and Kingston shook hands by completing the sale of the HyperX gaming division. In fact, all keyboards, mice, headsets, mousepads, gamepads and other HyperX accessories have passed under the control of HP, while Kingston itself has the good old memory on which the brand made its name. Immediately after the deal, Kingston announced a rebranding - the Fury, Predator and Impact series will now be called Renegade, Beast and Impact, and instead of the HyperX logo on the radiators, Kingston Fury will flaunt. But one does not surprise the buyer with a rearrangement of beds, so during the announcement, Kingston assured that for the new RAM they finalized the power circuits, redid the element base and used more modern memory chips.


Given the growing shortage of components and the increasing demand for powerful laptops, the SO-DIMM Impact series, which is designed for installation in laptops and small computers, has been most thoroughly modified. Unlike most laptop memory, which professes the principle of "buy something, put it and forget it", the Impact lineup looks as seriously as possible. For example, along with GOODRAM Iridium, Crucial Ballistix and G.Skill Ripjaws, this is one of the rare series in which absolutely all memory modules are equipped with a cooling radiator. And even though processors and video cards usually overheat in laptops, the extra cooling for the memory will obviously not be superfluous. Especially if she is XMP friendly and can overclock to 3200 MHz like Fury Impact.

The Fury Impact range gives the user maximum flexibility in choosing the right kit. The range of the series includes modules DDR4-2400, DDR4-2666, DDR4-2933 and DDR4-3200, timing schemes are CL14, CL15, CL16, CL17 and CL20, but the available volumes start from 4 GB and end with single and double sets of 32 and 64 GB. You heard right, this is indeed a rare variant of laptop memory, which is sold in the form of 32-gigabyte sticks. In all cases, the supply voltage is 1.2 V.