Teamgroup shows carbon fiber DDR5, wooden SSD designs, and 128GB CUDIMM modules at Computex

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Teamgroup shows carbon fiber DDR5, wooden SSD designs, and 128GB CUDIMM modules at Computex

Teamgroup used Computex 2026 to show a wide range of new memory and storage products across its T Force and T Create brands, including high capacity 4 rank CUDIMM modules, carbon fiber themed gaming memory and SSDs, wooden style creator products, and fast PCIe 5.0 storage.

The most technical product in the lineup is the T Create Expert AI 4R CUDIMM. This memory module supports up to 128GB per stick, runs at up to 8000 MT/s, and operates at 1.1V with CL64 timings. That means a system using only two DIMM slots could reach 256GB of DDR5 memory while still keeping high speeds.

That kind of capacity is not aimed at ordinary gaming builds. It is more useful for creators, developers, AI workloads, heavy multitasking, and workstation style PCs where memory capacity matters as much as speed. The demo system used two of these modules on an MSI MEG Z890 Unify X motherboard.

Teamgroup is building memory for creators, gamers, and future AI PCs

The taller heatsink design on the 4R CUDIMM modules is there for a reason. Packing more DRAM chips into a single module increases heat, so the extra cooling surface helps keep the memory stable. Teamgroup is also preparing an RGB version with a dimming lighting effect, although that version is expected to come in a more standard 64GB capacity and 6000 MT/s configuration.

ProductMain feature
T Create Expert AI 4R CUDIMM128GB per module, up to 8000 MT/s
T Create Expert DDR564GB modules, 6400 MT/s, CL42
T Create Classic H514 SSDPCIe 5.0, up to 14,200 MB/s read speed
T Force Z54E SSDPCIe 5.0, up to 14,900 MB/s
T Force G50 AirM.2 2230 SSD for compact devices
T Force CAMM2 memoryCarbon fiber trim, up to 8000 MT/s

Teamgroup also displayed the T Create Classic H514 M.2 SSD. It is a PCIe 5.0 drive using Silicon Motion’s SM2508 controller, with up to 4TB capacity and read speeds of up to 14,200 MB/s. That puts it in the high end storage category for creators who move large files, edit high resolution video, or work with heavy project folders.

One of the more unusual design choices was the new wooden themed look for T Create memory and SSD products. This is clearly aimed at creator PCs and clean desktop builds rather than aggressive gaming systems. The wooden texture gives the hardware a warmer and more minimal appearance, which could fit well in studio setups.

On the gaming side, Teamgroup’s T Force brand is moving toward carbon fiber styling. The company showed DDR5 memory and SSDs with carbon style trims, including the T Force Z54E PCIe 5.0 SSD. That drive supports up to 4TB capacity, uses 3D eTLC NAND, and can reach up to 14,900 MB/s, making it one of the faster storage products shown in the lineup.

Teamgroup also showed liquid cooled T Force Liquid II memory and SSD designs. These products continue the company’s experimental approach to cooling, especially as PCIe 5.0 SSDs and high speed DDR5 modules generate more heat than older hardware. Liquid cooling on SSDs is still niche, but it shows how far brands are willing to go to keep high end components stable.

The company also had CAMM2 memory on display, including Delta RGB and Vulcan solutions with carbon fiber trim and speeds up to 8000 MT/s. CAMM2 still has not taken off in desktop PCs, and it may take years before it becomes common. Current component shortages and weak DIY market conditions could slow adoption even more.

Still, the display shows where Teamgroup thinks the market is heading. Memory is no longer only about simple speed bins. Brands are now splitting products across specific use cases: high capacity AI and creator builds, fast gaming memory, compact SSDs for handhelds, PCIe 5.0 storage for workstations, and design focused products for themed PCs.

The main challenge will be price. DDR5 and SSD costs are already under pressure because of the wider memory shortage, and high capacity 4R CUDIMM modules will not be cheap. PCIe 5.0 drives with high end controllers and custom cooling will also carry a premium.

Even so, Teamgroup’s Computex lineup is one of its more interesting showings. The 128GB 4R CUDIMM modules point toward heavier AI and workstation workloads, the carbon fiber T Force products target gamers, and the wooden T Create designs give creators something visually different. It is a broad lineup, but it makes one thing clear: memory and storage are becoming more specialized, more powerful, and likely more expensive.

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