During my visit to Kingston Technology’s booth at COMPUTEX 2025, I was immediately drawn in by this year’s theme: “Kingston Powers Tomorrow: Committed to the AI Future.” True to form, Kingston didn’t just showcase products. They brought an entire city to life. Their Kingston Future City exhibit is one of the most immersive setups I’ve seen at Computex, highlighting how their memory and storage solutions are making real impact in AI, robotics, gaming, aerospace, and creative work.

The booth was divided into three distinct zones, each with its own vibe and use cases, making it easy to see how Kingston tech is applied across very different industries.

Kingston Intelligence Hub – Built for the AI Age

This was the first zone I checked out, and it set the tone for the entire experience. The DC3000ME PCIe 5.0 NVMe SSD and Server Premier DDR5 Memory were front and center, powering a GIGABYTE AI server rack. Seeing them in action reinforced how Kingston isn’t just releasing faster drives, they’re actively addressing the demands of AI and machine learning.

What really stood out was the collab with TIRC (Taiwan Intelligent Robotics Company). Their multi-modal inspection robot is the kind of tech you’d expect in futuristic factory floors or remote sites capable of collecting massive data and sending it to AI servers for real-time processing. And yes, all of that runs on Kingston memory and SSDs. From AI PCs to servers, they’ve got the full pipeline covered.

It’s clear Kingston isn’t just supporting the AI boom and they’re enabling it.

FURY Acceleration Center – Gaming and Performance Fans, This Is Your Zone

Next up, I dove into the FURY zone. If you’re into gaming or performance computing, this was eye candy central. The highlight? The Kingston FURY Renegade G5 SSD, a Gen5 NVMe M.2 beast that delivers insane speeds, shown off inside a seriously powerful ASUS rig.

They also had the Renegade DDR5 at 8800MT/s, plus their compact FURY Impact DDR5 CAMM2, which opens up overclocking and performance potential in smaller form factors. Kingston’s clearly doubling down on next-gen speeds for gamers and creators alike.

Honestly, this setup gave me a few build ideas I’m tempted to try when I get back.

Innovative Creators Lab – From Satellites to Content Creation

This part of the booth surprised me the most. Kingston showcased their tech’s role in aerospace. Partnering with student engineers from NTUST and NFU (shoutout to RTET) to power a working rocket project. Yes, a rocket. On display was a custom avionics system using a Kingston FURY Renegade G5 SSD that captures and transmits real-time flight data. Ground control? That’s handled by an MSI-powered setup using FURY DDR5 and SSDs.

This zone also highlighted Kingston’s commitment to creators. We saw the refreshed XS1000 and XS2000 external SSDs, the new DataTraveler Exodia S USB, and updated Canvas Plus SD and microSD cards. If you’re editing a footage shot at 4K or sampling flight data, Kingston seems to have the solution.

Kingston’s display at COMPUTEX 2025 was not merely an array of flashy lights; it was the narrative of how memory and storage develop as they address genuine needs out in the world, from AI automation to gaming and aerospace. What struck me the most was how it all came together. They were not simply creating faster drives; they were enabling systems that ignite innovation across all sectors.

Their “Built on Commitment” slogan is more than a slogan; it is a quality that permeates every aspect of the Future City experience.

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