T-FORCE XTREEM DDR4: One Package, Multiple Posts, 100K+ Total Views
In June 2022, TeamGroup’s T-FORCE sent me a package that actually made sense for the content I was already posting. The main product was the T-FORCE XTREEM DDR4 32GB 3600MHz kit, and they also sent me the Cardea Zero 1TB M.2 SSD. This wasn’t a lifestyle product where you can just hold it up and say it’s cool. PC parts content only works if you make it visual, practical, and fast. So I treated it like a real upgrade story, not a “thank you for the box” post.
The two main videos combined for about 85K views, with one landing around 76K and the other around 8K. That’s the kind of split you usually see when a concept hits on one post and then the follow-up is more niche. The important part is that the big one wasn’t random. It was the result of making the upgrade feel obvious and satisfying to watch. People love anything that looks like “making your PC better,” as long as you show it cleanly and you don’t drag it out.
I also posted a more educational video that hit around 23K views, explaining why someone might mix two different RAM kits. That one wasn’t a direct “buy this exact model” ad, and it didn’t even have to name-drop the product constantly. It was about being useful. In the PC niche, education is a cheat code because viewers reward content that saves them time or money. If you can explain something clearly, you build trust, and that trust carries into every brand post you do after.
On top of that, I did a package/show-off style video that hit about 4.8K views. That type of post is not supposed to be the biggest one. It’s more like proof and context. It shows the collab is real, it shows what arrived, and it gives you another piece of content in the sequence that keeps the partnership visible without forcing a hard sell. In a bundle like this, those “supporting” posts matter because they create multiple touchpoints instead of one post that disappears.
This TeamGroup collab belongs in my portfolio because it shows range inside one partnership. I did performance content that traveled (76K and 8K), I did educational content that built trust (23K), and I did a simple package post for visibility (4.8K). The products were real upgrades, the content stayed native to TikTok, and the results were logged instead of being vague. That’s the exact outcome brands want when they send hardware: show it in real context, make it watchable, and make sure it actually reaches people.