The Ares RGB DDR5-6000 C34’s timings are decent for the price. Entry-level DDR5-6000 starts at $75 but has worse timings than Lexar’s memory kit. It’s not a bad price, but it isn't the cheapest DDR5-6000 memory kit. But if you’re the type after the highest-performing memory kit, the Ares isn’t it. Perhaps the only good news is that the performance delta between Ares and its competitors isn’t meaningful for the majority. The memory kit offers better performance on Intel platforms despite coming with XMP 3.0 and AMD EXPO profiles. The Ares RGB DDR5-6000 C34 is a bag of surprises regarding performance. We used a similar 1.4V DRAM voltage as the overclocking test. There were some tweaking margins for the tRCD and tRP timings too. At DDR5-6000, however, the Ares memory kit ran fine with a CAS Latency (CL) of 30 cycles. The Ares' out-of-the-box performance isn't strong, but you can remedy it if you're into tweaking. TeamGroup T-Force Delta RGB DDR5-6000 C40