Kingston @ COMPUTEX 2025: New storage products for consumers and industrial applications

Kingston has delivered something different at COMPUTEX 2025 compared to its past edition of booth showcase. Under the theme “Kingston Powers Tomorrow,” the company showcased high-performance memory and storage solutions driving everything from AI data centers to aerospace hardware.
Kingston’s booth was organized as the “Kingston Future City,” split into three thematic zones: the Intelligence Hub, the FURY Acceleration Center, and the Creators Lab. Each focused on a specific segment of Kingston’s innovation efforts – AI infrastructure, gaming performance, and real-world applications.
In the Intelligence Hub, Kingston demonstrated an AI server rack from GIGABYTE populated with DC3000ME PCIe 5.0 NVMe U.2 SSDs and Server Premier DDR5 memory. These enterprise-grade drives offer read speeds up to 14,000MB/s and are optimized for high IOPS and low latency, critical for AI inference and real-time processing.
Kingston also highlighted a live use case with Taiwan Intelligent Robotics Company (TIRC). Their inspection robots, operating in remote or hazardous environments, utilize Kingston memory and SSDs for on-the-fly data collection and analysis.
The FURY Acceleration Center addressed the gaming and enthusiast crowd. Kingston unveiled the FURY Renegade G5 PCIe 5.0 NVMe SSD, capable of 14,800MB/s read and 14,000MB/s write speeds, making it one of the fastest client SSDs on display.
Paired with the new FURY Renegade DDR5 CUDIMM (up to 8800MT/s) and FURY Impact DDR5 CAMM2 (now scaling to 128GB), the lineup reflects Kingston’s push into high-speed, high-capacity memory solutions for desktop and mobile platforms alike.
In a standout showcase at the Creators Lab, Kingston partnered with NTUST and NFU’s Rocket Technology Exploration Team (RTET) to demonstrate aerospace applications. A rocket on display housed a Kingston FURY Renegade G5 SSD in its payload, used for real-time flight data capture.
Back on the ground, Kingston tech powered a high-end MSI PC and a server stack for flight simulation and high-bandwidth data processing. The demonstration reinforced Kingston’s role in extreme performance scenarios beyond typical enterprise or consumer use.
Kingston also refreshed its consumer storage line, debuting new XS2000 external SSDs, the DataTraveler Exodia S USB flash drive (up to 512GB), and faster Canvas Plus SD and microSD cards. These updates target creators, mobile professionals, and users needing reliable, high-speed portable storage.
Product specs at a glance:
- FURY Renegade G5 SSD: PCIe 5.0 NVMe, 14,800MB/s read, 14,000MB/s write, up to 4TB
- DC3000ME SSD: PCIe 5.0 U.2, 14,000MB/s read, 2.8M IOPS, up to 15.36TB
- FURY Renegade DDR5 CUDIMM: Up to 8800MT/s, 96GB
- FURY Impact DDR5 CAMM2: Up to 128GB
- DataTraveler Exodia S: USB 3.2 Gen1, 512GB
- Canvas Plus Cards: Upgraded speed, SD and microSD formats
Kingston cements position at the intersection of AI, performance, and reliability
By linking enterprise-grade storage with cutting-edge consumer tech and showcasing actual aerospace applications, Kingston used COMPUTEX 2025 to emphasize its role in powering the next era of AI, gaming, and high-stakes innovation.