Corsair Vengeance RGB DDR5 32GB (2x16GB) 6000 CL30
2-stick 32GB DDR5-6000 kit, CL30, RGB.
DDR5-6000 CL30 with RGB. Sweet spot for Ryzen 9000 EXPO. Premium but worth it for top builds.
Official India stock. Full warranty through the brand's India service network, standard RMA if anything goes wrong.
Full specs
Corsair Vengeance RGB 32GB DDR5-6000 India - iCUE ARGB RAM for AM5 Builds
The Corsair Vengeance RGB 32GB DDR5-6000 is a well-built kit for AM5 builds, and it earns its place on spec sheets - but it also costs more than the performance justifies if you don't care about RGB lighting.
DDR5-6000 and Why It Matters for AM5
On AMD's AM5 platform with Ryzen 7000 and 9000 series processors, the memory controller has an optimal gear ratio. At DDR5-6000, the fabric runs in Gear 1 mode on most chips - meaning the memory controller and RAM operate at a 1:1 ratio. Above 6000 MHz, most boards switch to Gear 2, which adds latency and partially offsets the bandwidth gains. DDR5-6000 is the practical ceiling for best latency and bandwidth together on AM5.
EXPO is AMD's memory profile standard - equivalent to Intel's XMP. The Vengeance RGB DDR5-6000 carries an EXPO profile. You enable it in BIOS (usually a single toggle), and the kit runs at its rated 6000 MHz automatically. No manual tuning needed.
What the RGB Adds
Corsair uses per-module ARGB diffusers on the Vengeance RGB, controlled through iCUE software. If you're already running iCUE for a Corsair case (like the 4000D Airflow or 5000X), Corsair AIO cooler, or Corsair fans - the RAM syncs into the same lighting profile without any extra work. The visual integration is genuinely good when the whole system is in the iCUE ecosystem.
If you're not using iCUE for other components, the RGB here becomes an independent light show with no system-wide sync. It still looks fine, but the ecosystem argument disappears.
The Honest Comparison
The non-RGB Corsair Vengeance DDR5-6000 runs the same dies, same EXPO profile, same timings. The only difference is no addressable RGB. It costs ₹2,000–3,000 less in India - roughly ₹10,000–15,000 vs ₹13,000–18,000 for the RGB version. Gaming benchmarks between the two will be statistically identical.
I'm not going to pretend that doesn't matter. If your case has no tempered glass panel, or you genuinely don't care about lighting, save the money and buy the non-RGB version.
Dual-Channel Setup on AM5
AM5 boards follow the same dual-channel slot convention as previous platforms - A2 and B2 (second and fourth slots from the CPU). Check your board manual. Running both sticks in the right slots is especially important on DDR5, where the memory controller is more sensitive to single-channel configurations.
India Availability
MDComputers and PrimeABGB typically stock this kit. Vedant Computers sometimes carries it. Amazon India pricing fluctuates - I've seen this kit range from ₹13,000 to ₹18,000 depending on the week. Corsair India products go through Rashi Peripherals for warranty, which covers manufacturing defects for the stated period.
Who Should Buy This
You're building an AM5 system, you want 32GB DDR5-6000 at the platform sweet spot, and you're already invested in the Corsair iCUE ecosystem. The RGB integration is your primary reason to choose this over the non-RGB variant.
Who Should Skip It
You don't use iCUE, or your case doesn't have a side panel window. In that case, the non-RGB Vengeance DDR5-6000 does everything this kit does at lower cost.
The Vengeance RGB DDR5-6000 is a good kit. Just be clear about what the premium is actually buying you.