At this point, 3600MHz is considered plenty enough for most purposes, while 4400MHz is shown in some games to offer a bit more performance, but won’t be that tangible in day-to-day use. The next RAM factor to look at is speed, which again matters up to a certain point but shouldn’t supersede RAM size when buying new RAM. While size is a key thing to consider, you hit diminishing returns once you reach 16GB (and definitely 32GB) in most use cases. Size isn’t the only thing to consider with RAM. And “futureproofing” doesn’t really hold up as an argument because RAM is likely to move onto the next DDR generation rather than keep growing in size. There’s little purpose for going above that unless you have some kind of multi-monitor, multi-software-running-simultaneously setup.
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