
TeamGroup T-Force Delta RGB 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5-6000 CL30
2-stick 32GB DDR5-6000 kit, CL30, RGB.
TeamGroup DDR5-6000 with RGB. Slightly cheaper than Corsair/G.Skill equivalents. Good Ryzen EXPO compatibility.
Official India stock. Full warranty through the brand's India service network, standard RMA if anything goes wrong.
Full specs
TeamGroup T-Force Delta RGB 32GB DDR5-6000 Review India 2025
DDR5-6000 is the acknowledged sweet spot for AMD AM5 platforms. At this frequency, the Ryzen 7000 and 9000 series Infinity Fabric runs in a 1:1 ratio with memory, which keeps latency low and bandwidth high without pushing the controller hard. I have tested a lot of RAM on AM5 - DDR5-6000 consistently outperforms DDR5-5600 in latency-sensitive workloads and games, while DDR5-6400 and above deliver diminishing returns for most use cases.
The T-Force Delta RGB 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5-6000 kit lands right on that target frequency. TeamGroup supports both AMD EXPO and Intel XMP 3.0 profiles, so enabling the rated speed is a one-click BIOS operation on both platforms. That dual-profile support matters if you are building on Intel LGA1700 or plan a platform change later.
What You Actually Get
The angular heat spreader is the first thing you notice. TeamGroup designed the Delta with dramatic diagonal lines across the aluminum spreader, and the RGB strip runs along the top edge of both sticks. It is not subtle - if your case has a window and you want visible RGB without spending G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB money, this kit delivers that aesthetic at a lower price.
Rated timings are CL38-38-38-84. That is on the looser side for DDR5-6000 - premium kits from G.Skill and Kingston offer CL30 or CL32 at the same speed. The real-world performance gap between CL30 and CL38 at 6000 MHz is smaller than the numbers suggest. In gaming benchmarks, you are typically looking at 1-3% differences in frame rates. For productivity workloads that are bandwidth-dependent, the gap narrows further. For pure memory benchmarks, CL30 wins clearly. Choose based on your actual workload.
India Pricing and Availability
I have seen this kit priced between ₹11,000 and ₹16,000 at MDComputers, with availability fluctuating. India's roughly 20% import duty on memory components means TeamGroup kits often land at a slight premium over their global street prices. MDComputers is the most consistent stockist for TeamGroup products in India. PrimeABGB and Vedant Computers occasionally stock it; Amazon India listings exist but verify seller reliability before purchasing.
Compare it against the Corsair Vengeance DDR5-6000 32GB (₹11,000–16,000) and Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-6000 32GB (₹10,000–15,000). All three compete at similar price points. The Kingston Fury Beast has tighter timings at stock. The Corsair Vengeance has Rashi Peripherals warranty support in India. The T-Force Delta wins on RGB aesthetics if that is a priority.
Dual-Channel Is Not Optional
Whatever kit you buy, install both sticks. DDR5 in single-channel mode loses roughly 30–40% of effective bandwidth on AM5. The Ryzen memory controller is designed around dual-channel operation. Both sticks in A2/B2 slots (second and fourth slots from the CPU) is the standard configuration for most AM5 motherboards.
Who Should Buy This
Build a Ryzen 5 7600, Ryzen 7 7700X, Ryzen 9 7950X, or any Ryzen 9000 series processor with this kit and you are at the right frequency with correct capacity for 2025 gaming. 32GB handles modern AAA titles, content creation side tasks, and browser-heavy workloads without pressure. The RGB is a genuine differentiator if your build has a window panel. If RGB does not matter to you, the Kingston Fury Beast DDR5-6000 non-RGB saves a small amount and has similar or better timings.
CL38 is acceptable. The kit is not the fastest DDR5-6000 option, but it is not slow either. For the price range and the aesthetics, it is a reasonable AM5 choice.
Buy at: MDComputers, PrimeABGB, Amazon India