Oussebon
Multiverse Poster
It could relate to Ryzen's relative pickiness with RAM and/or PCS's quite high bars for RAM stability/compatibility. It was ages before they offered Ryzen CPUs with anything faster than 2133MHz, which was a very sad situation. The point is it might be too hard for PCS to guarantee a stable supply of 8 stick RAM kits that run stably / stably enough to satisfy them at 3000MHz.
Bear in mind that you may run into compatibility issues if you try to add more RAM in the future - you may find that you'll end up needing to lower the frequencies, or that stuff that 'should' work just doesn't. The latter is also an issue on adding RAM to Intel systems though.
Bear in mind that you may run into compatibility issues if you try to add more RAM in the future - you may find that you'll end up needing to lower the frequencies, or that stuff that 'should' work just doesn't. The latter is also an issue on adding RAM to Intel systems though.