JayzTwoCents Calls Out Corsair For Deleting Comments, But Gets It Wrong
JayzTwoCents accused Corsair of deleting comments on an X promotional post, claiming the company removed criticism about RAM pricing. The claim spread fast, but the situation looks far more like a platform issue than targeted comment removal. Once the noise settles, the real story is less dramatic than his social posts suggested.
The reaction from Jay on X was immediate and confident. He insisted Corsair was deleting comments that mentioned high memory prices, and users began echoing the accusation without checking whether the comments were actually removed by the company. This is not the first time a creator has assumed bad intent from a brand based on incomplete platform behaviour, and the pattern played out again here.
Jay built the situation into a short cycle of drama by posting multiple follow-ups and framing the incident as deliberate action by Corsair. The claim fit neatly into a narrative that big brands hide criticism, and many of his followers took it at face value. The problem is that X is not the only platform where comment visibility breaks, but other social platforms, especially Facebook, routinely mishandle comments even when no one touches them; they regularly disappear, or vanish without reason.
Facebook regularly hides or collapses comments without user input.
Corsair did not announce any change to its moderation policies, and there is no clear evidence that the company targeted comments about pricing. What is more likely is that the comments were never displayed consistently in the first place. Facebook is notorious for hiding comments, collapsing threads, and failing to display new replies across devices. It is common for users to see comment counts that do not match what appears in the thread.
Brands often receive complaints about missing comments that were never removed at all. Facebook sorts replies by what it thinks is relevant rather than by time. It also filters comments by language, suspected spam, and user engagement. Many users have experienced writing a comment, refreshing the page, and seeing it vanish from their view even though it still exists for others. None of this requires manual action from Corsair.
When Jay saw his own test comment disappear, he assumed deletion. The more likely explanation is the same behaviour Facebook has shown for years. This is a platform problem, not proof that Corsair scrubbed criticism. Without proper visibility tools, users cannot reliably tell the difference, and the drama cycle on X can begin before anyone checks the technical reality.
Why DRAM pricing is high, and why this is a separate issue entirely
Although Jay framed the conversation around RAM pricing, the pricing trend itself is unrelated to his claim about removed comments. DRAM costs have risen significantly because of a fundamental shift in how memory is allocated across the industry. As covered in detail in our article “AI Is Eating All The DRAM,” the root cause is a realignment of supply driven by AI infrastructure demand.
Memory manufacturers prioritise high-margin DRAM and advanced memory stacks for AI servers. These parts are used in large GPU clusters, training systems, and inference racks, all of which consume huge volumes of DRAM. With limited wafer capacity available, consumer DRAM receives less allocation. When supply tightens, module makers face higher component costs, and retail pricing goes up across the board.
This supply pressure has nothing to do with Corsair moderating comments or the claims made on X. The increase in RAM prices is a market response to an industry-wide supply imbalance. AI workloads consume far more DRAM than traditional servers, so wafer capacity shifts toward those products. Consumer kits are simply caught in the crossfire.
In other words, the DRAM pricing trend is real, but Corsair removing pricing criticism is not the reason. The two topics are separate and should not be presented as cause and effect. The pricing story comes from global supply, not from moderation on a social media post.
JayzTwoCents was quick to accuse Corsair of deleting comments, but the evidence does not support that claim. Comment visibility issues are common on Facebook and other platforms, and nothing indicates that Corsair removed criticism. The wider issue of rising DRAM prices is real, but it is driven by the global memory supply chain, not by anything that happened in a comment thread. The two stories intersect only because they happened at the same time, not because they share a cause.

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