OLOY Warhawk Platinum Special Edition RGB (8GBx2) 16GB 3600Mhz
OLOY Warhawk Platinum






At 54g (1.9 ounces), these are some of the lightest oversized LED DIMMs we’ve tested. Oloy says they still have the same 8-layer PCB in their OLOY Warhawk Platinum as competitors though, and even backs that up with a relatively high XMP. We rate modules as “low latency” if they have less than one cycle of latency for every 100 MHz of frequency (200 MHz data rate), so its 16-18-18-36 XMP timings put it right in the middle of the performance market.
Lacking a utility of its own, the OLOy WarHawk’s RGB control is supported by the utilities of major motherboard brands (ASRock, Asus, Gigabyte, MSI). We had some difficulty with MSI’s application, which we resolved using a version of MSI Dragon Center that was released between the version boxed with our board and the version listed at the motherboard’s support page.
After five years of establishing itself as an OEM module supplier, Chunwell introduced its OLOy brand in 2018. A company spokesperson told us that all of OLOy’s products are made in Taiwan, where Chunwell also manufactures modules for other brands. In the U.S., you can find its DRAM modules selling on both Amazon and Newegg. In China, you’ll find its products on Alibaba.
We could test a dozen OLOy kits, but we can never account for all the potential issues a consumer could encounter. That’s why looking at user reviews can be helpful, particularly when you don’t know if you can trust a new brand. The good news is that, putting aside some user confusion about how to use newer RAM with older CPUs and how to overclock it, the number of real complaints is very low.