What RamScout does

We turn messy RAM listings into a simple price-per-GB ranking.

RamScout scans live marketplace listings, extracts capacity + type, calculates £/GB, and surfaces the best value deals for DDR3–DDR5. Built for PC builders, homelab tinkerers, and anyone tired of scrolling past “gaming PC” bundles just to find RAM.

Tip: the best bargains usually hide in boring listings. We bring them to the top.

How it works

RamScout pulls fresh marketplace data and keeps a rolling set of listings so you’re not staring at old, sold-out bargains.

We try to extract generation (DDR3/4/5), capacity (GB), and form factor (DIMM / SODIMM / RDIMM). Weird listings happen — we’re actively tightening filters.

A £60 128GB kit is £0.47/GB. A £30 16GB kit is £1.88/GB. We rank by the number that actually matters when you’re value hunting.

Pick your generation, form factor, speed, condition, and marketplace. You can also focus on popular “sweet spot” sizes like 32GB DDR4.

Why we built it

RAM shopping is a time sink. Listings are inconsistent, bundles are noisy, and the “best deal” isn’t obvious. We wanted a simple tool that answers one question:

“What’s the best value RAM right now?”
Not the flashiest. Not the highest MHz. The best value per GB.

If it saves you money (or hours of scrolling), it’s doing its job.

Quick £/GB calculator

Paste a listing price and capacity to sanity-check value in seconds. (This is the same idea RamScout uses to rank deals.)

£
Result
Rough guide: Great under £0.60/GB (varies by generation & market).

Pick a vibe (we’ll take you to the right deals)


What we try to exclude
Full PCs, laptops, bundles, and anything that isn’t clearly RAM. If you spot a bad listing, it helps us tighten the filters.
What “price per GB” means
It’s the listing price divided by capacity. It’s great for comparing value across different sizes.

Roadmap (the fun bits)

Live Deal pages ranked by price/GB
Live Shareable link previews (OG images)
Next Deal alerts / notifications
Next Cleaner filtering to remove PC/laptop bundles
Later Community-submitted “sweet spot” pages