Origin Code Adds an LCD Water Block to Its Vortex 48 GB DDR5 6200 Kit Ahead of Computex 2026

Origin Code is preparing one of the more eye catching memory showcases for Computex 2026, with its Vortex 48 GB DDR5 6200 kit now appearing alongside a dedicated water block that includes a built in LCD display. The company has also signaled its Computex presence through its official Instagram activity, pointing visitors to the OCPC Gaming booth in Taipei from June 2 to June 5, where the brand is expected to show the new hardware in person.

The new kit centers on a 48 GB configuration using 2 x 24 GB modules rated for DDR5 6200 at CL28, which already places it in enthusiast territory before the cooling hardware even enters the picture. Reports around the announcement also say the memory can reach 8000 MT/s at CL36 through a Dual EXPO Profile P2 setting, giving Origin Code another aggressive performance angle for creators, AI workloads, and high end gaming builds.

What really separates this reveal from the usual premium memory launch is the Vortex water block itself. According to coverage of the new setup, the block uses a dual inlet and single outlet flow design with standard G1/4 fittings and adds a 178 degree wide view LCD with 222 x 480 resolution at 60 Hz for live hardware monitoring. Origin Code also claims the water block can improve heat dissipation efficiency by up to 50%, reducing average module temperature from around 66°C to 31°C when the kit is running near 1.55 V. Those figures are company claims shown through the launch materials, so real world testing at Computex will be the key next step.

This launch also expands a memory family that has already been positioned as highly experimental and enthusiast focused. Earlier Vortex coverage from CES 2026 showed Origin Code building the series around unusually aggressive cooling concepts, including an optional triple fan module, with capacities ranging from 32 GB to 256 GB and speeds reaching as high as 8000 MT/s. That broader context makes the new LCD water block feel less like a one off stunt and more like the next stage of the company’s attempt to build a distinct identity in premium DDR5.

What Origin Code has not shared yet is just as important. There is still no confirmed retail pricing or launch date for the new 48 GB kit and its water cooling accessory, so for now this remains a showcase product heading into Computex rather than a fully commercialized launch with final market details attached.

If Origin Code can translate this kind of design into stable real world performance, it could become one of the more talked about boutique memory displays at this year’s show, especially among builders who want something far more dramatic than the standard RGB DIMM formula.

Would you actually build around a water cooled memory kit with a live LCD screen, or is this the kind of enthusiast hardware that is more fun to admire than to own?

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Angel Morales

Founder and lead writer at Duck-IT Tech News, and dedicated to delivering the latest news, reviews, and insights in the world of technology, gaming, and AI. With experience in the tech and business sectors, combining a deep passion for technology with a talent for clear and engaging writing

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