
Netac used Computex 2026 in Taipei to show a fresh set of storage and memory products, according to a report from TechPowerUp. The lineup covers consumer DDR5 memory kits, compact portable SSDs, and high-capacity U.3 enterprise solid-state drives.
One of the consumer-focused products on display was Netac’s Shadow II RGB DDR5 memory. The modules are built with high-quality memory ICs and can reach speeds of up to 7600MHz, positioning them for gaming PCs and performance desktops.
The Shadow II RGB series also supports Intel XMP 3.0 and AMD EXPO overclocking profiles, which should make it easier for users to apply higher-speed memory settings on compatible platforms. Netac has also added aluminum heat spreaders and RGB lighting, matching the look many PC gamers expect from modern enthusiast memory kits.
Netac has not announced a launch date for the Shadow II RGB DDR5 kits yet, so final retail timing and regional availability remain unclear.

The company also brought its ZX20 V portable SSD to the show. The drive has a very small body measuring 71.5 x 43.5 x 8mm and weighs just 23 grams, making it a pocket-size option for people who need fast external storage.
The ZX20 V uses an aluminum alloy shell and 3D TLC NAND. Netac plans to offer it in 512GB, 1TB, 2TB, and 4TB capacities, giving buyers a range of options from basic file transfer use to larger media and project storage.
For performance, the portable drive uses a USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 interface rated at 20Gbps. Netac lists sequential read speeds of up to 2000MB/s and sequential write speeds of up to 1700MB/s, which would put the drive in the faster tier of compact external SSDs.
On the enterprise side, Netac showed two U.3 PCIe 4.0 x4 SSD families. The ENSP401 series comes in capacities from 1.92TB all the way up to 30.72TB, with sequential read and write speeds of up to 7000MB/s and 3800MB/s. Random read performance is rated as high as 850,000 IOPS.

The higher-performance ENSP403 series pushes write performance further. Netac lists sequential write speeds of up to 6800MB/s and random read performance of up to 1.6 million IOPS, aiming the drives at heavier data center and enterprise workloads.
For U.S. readers following PC hardware, Netac’s Computex showing is a useful snapshot of where the storage market is heading: faster DDR5 kits for gaming systems, very small high-speed portable SSDs for creators and professionals, and large U.3 drives for enterprise infrastructure.