Corsair Gaming, the company most people associate with RGB keyboards and gaming RAM, just made a very deliberate pivot. On May 22, the NASDAQ-listed firm launched a full lineup of AI workstations and servers under the Corsair Pro brand, built around NVIDIA’s Blackwell architecture and aimed squarely at enterprise customers who need serious compute without renting cloud time.

The flagship model, the FlexPrime V80B, features the NVIDIA GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip. It ships with 775 GB of coherent shared memory, combining 279 GB of HBM3e GPU memory with 496 GB of LPDDR5X system memory linked via NVLink.

What Corsair is actually selling

The FlexPrime series isn’t a single product. It’s a tiered family: the V20R, V50R, V80T, and V80B, each targeting different rungs of the AI development ladder. Entry-level configurations start under $5,000, while the high-end setups, particularly those equipped with AMD Threadripper CPUs and NVIDIA RTX Pro 6000 GPUs, climb into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

There’s also an R80T model in the mix, aimed at server-class deployments for labs and research teams. The entire lineup is designed for AI training, fine-tuning, inference, and simulation workloads.