Definitely, the X series came out oriented/aimed at the 1155 and Sandy Bridge, then the Z series which while primarily aimed at X79 was also the entry for Ivy Bridge, next from GSkill was Ares, which is sort of a low profile general stick, and was soon followed by the initial Trident line which has now been greatly expanded towards Haswell and the Z87 mobos, these are currently available up through 3000 sticks. They are on the taller side but do have a removeable upper fin for overlarge CPU coolers. I've been building going back to the 386 CPUs and have used all kinds of DRAM, and though I've cut way back, I'll still build 40-50 rigs a year and oft times have a client that has a hardcore tie to a certain manufacturer, so I'll build with that DRAM (gives me a chance to test and compare) and most always GSkill sets come out ahead, even have clients change from their choice on occasion when they see the differences.