You may notice something that seems almost suspicious if you look at the RAM listings on Newegg or Amazon right now: prices have decreased. Not drastically, not back to what any sane person would consider normal, but down. A few weeks ago, a Corsair Vengeance DDR5 kit was priced at $409; today, it costs about $369. Even a $40 decline feels significant after months of seeing memory prices rise as if they had an urgent need. It’s news. Simply put, this is not the news that PC builders have been anticipating.
The tale of how gaming RAM became so costly in the first place is actually about artificial intelligence (AI) and how quickly the hunger of one industry can impede the availability of essential components to another. AI datacenters, which are enormous, power-hungry facilities used to train and operate large language models and other compute-intensive systems, have been using memory at a rate that the market was not designed to handle for the past year or so.
| Key Facts: The PC Gaming RAM Price Crisis | |
|---|---|
| Memory Type Affected | DDR4 and DDR5 RAM kits for desktop and laptop PCs |
| Primary Cause of Price Surge | AI datacenter demand absorbing consumer memory supply |
| Key Companies Involved | Micron, Corsair, MSI, Google |
| Price Surge Scale | DDR4 spot prices spiked roughly 2,200% at peak AI demand |
| Recent Price Drop | DDR4 spot prices fell approximately 5% — some DDR5 kits dropped by up to $40 |
| Example Product | Corsair Vengeance RGB DDR5-6000 32GB — recent high: $409, current: $369.99, all-time low: $87 |
| Trigger for Drop | Google’s TurboQuant compression algorithm, reducing DRAM requirements for some AI workflows |
| Expert Assessment | Ben Barringer (Quilter Cheviot): TurboQuant is “evolutionary, not revolutionary” |
| MSI 2026 Forecast | Plans to raise product prices 15–30% in 2026 |
| Consumer Behavior | Buyers refusing to purchase at inflated prices, contributing to mild demand slowdown |
| Analyst Outlook | Price relief expected to be temporary; long-term AI demand unchanged |
| Affected Markets | United States, Europe, China — all showing early signs of modest retail price decline |
One of the biggest memory manufacturers in the world, Micron, has successfully shifted production priorities from consumer-grade RAM kits to the high-bandwidth memory required by AI infrastructure. For anyone attempting to construct or improve a gaming PC, the outcome was terrible. At its lowest price of about $87, a 32GB DDR5 kit shot up to $400. Prices increased by more than 600 percent in some areas. People who had been saving for a new build and watched their budget evaporate without purchasing a single component filled Reddit threads in PC building communities with a particular kind of resigned frustration.
This week, Google introduced TurboQuant, a compression algorithm that can drastically lower the memory needed for particular AI workflows under certain circumstances. The announcement hit the stock market before it did anything else. Major memory manufacturers’ shares fell sharply, and retail product prices followed, with some DDR5 kits dropping by as much as $40 in a matter of days. The reversal was significant enough to garner real coverage in hardware publications for a market that had been heading in one direction for months.
As you watch this, it’s tempting to think that the tide is finally turning. That might be true in certain contexts. Even AI-hungry manufacturers can’t completely ignore the demand slowdown caused by people simply refusing to purchase RAM at prices that seem ridiculous, according to Tom’s Hardware. In a market that had appeared unchangeable, that combination of factors—a new algorithm and buyers crossing their arms—nudged something loose.

However, it’s worth enduring the skepticism of analysts. TurboQuant is “evolutionary, not revolutionary,” according to Ben Barringer, head of technology research at Quilter Cheviot, who told CNBC that it doesn’t alter the long-term demand picture for AI memory. There are actual limitations to the algorithm. It works for some workflows but not others, and modern AI infrastructure uses so much memory that cutting efficiency in one area doesn’t significantly lower overall appetite. It’s similar to a city approving ten new water parks while simultaneously announcing a water-saving initiative. The gesture is genuine. The calculations don’t quite add up.
MSI is the source of the more unsettling data point that is silently present in the background. MSI intends to increase prices across all of its product lines by 15 to 30 percent in 2026, according to a statement made earlier this year by the company’s general manager. That is a major hardware manufacturer’s stated intention, not a rumor or an analyst’s prediction. It’s difficult not to interpret that as a sign that those closest to the supply chain don’t anticipate an improvement in the situation anytime soon. The manufacturers of the products don’t appear to be making plans to take advantage of the brief respite the market recently experienced.
Hardware communities generally advise anyone sitting on a build list to wait, but not overly optimistically. For the first time in a long time, prices are heading in the right direction, and that is truly something to celebrate. The slight current drop is preferable to nothing if you need RAM right away—for a malfunctioning stick or a new machine with a deadline. However, purchasing speculatively in the hopes of catching the bottom of a trend that isn’t obviously bottoming out seems like a risk that the current state of the market doesn’t support. That Corsair kit’s lowest price ever was $87. You’re not getting a good deal at $369. There’s a momentary pause.
Following this story for months has given me the impression that the PC gaming hardware market is going through something it wasn’t meant to withstand: a collision between the consumer upgrade cycle and a technological boom operating at a completely different scale. The infrastructure aspirations of the biggest tech companies in the world were never meant to be rivaled by gaming RAM. It’s doing that now, unintentionally, and the most relief that collision is likely to provide, at least temporarily, is the sporadic $40 price drop.