Chrome crushes a 1.5 TB monster PC under 4,500 tabs
Chrome Confronts the Ultimate Memory Reservoir
Google Chrome remains the tech industry's favorite memory punchline, famous for consuming hardware resources like an unchecked background daemon. For typical systems carrying 16 GB or 32 GB of RAM, the threshold of instability arrives quickly. But what happens when you throw enterprise-grade hardware at this software problem?
A recent stress test pushed Google Chrome to its absolute limits using a dual-socket system packed with two AMD EPYC 9684X processors. These chips deploy 192 total Zen 4 cores with 3D V-Cache. Backing this silicon brute force was 1.5 terabytes of DDR5 registered memory, built from 128 GB DIMMs worth an estimated $40,000. This experiment was designed to bypass the traditional hardware limits that usually crash consumer rigs, revealing the stark bottlenecks embedded within modern operating systems.
The Architecture of Extreme Memory

To understand how a system addresses 1.5 TB of memory, we must look at how DDR5 registered DIMMs (RDIMMs) have evolved. Standard consumer DDR5 memory struggles with signal noise when configured in high-capacity layouts. Historically, server systems relied on specialized, expensive load-reduced DIMMs (LRDIMMs) to buffer control and data signals.
Modern RDIMMs sidestep this requirement. They split the single 72-bit Error-Correcting Code (ECC) channel of old into dual independent 40-bit subchannels. By placing power management integrated circuits directly on the memory stick and employing decision feedback equalization, modern hardware filters out the electrical noise that once required LRDIMMs.
Windows 11 Hits the Wall
To conduct the test fairly, the engineering team used a custom Python automation script to open batches of web pages. The script targeted popular portals, including Floatplane and LTT Store, to simulate real-world usage rather than blank pages.
Under Windows 11, the experiment hit an unexpected ceiling. The operating system began struggling at just 1,500 tabs, despite using less than 180 GB of the available system RAM. The user interface turned sluggish, the taskbar froze, and web pages stopped rendering correctly. Worse yet, the system's entry-level graphics card ran entirely out of Video RAM (VRAM) while trying to process hundreds of parallel video elements. At 3,015 tabs, Windows 11 crashed completely, dump-loading the system memory state back down to idle levels.
Linux Reveals Structural Advantages
Switching the server over to Ubuntu required some command-line prep, starting with raising the open file limit to 65,535. Linux immediately displayed far more linear memory utilization.
The OS memory architecture differences are striking. Linux operates on an "everything is a file" philosophy. System monitors query the virtualized /proc directory, treating hardware states as simple text files. Windows, conversely, manages hardware information through formal object queries via APIs like Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI), which adds overhead under extreme multi-threaded loads.
Despite the smoother scaling, Chrome crashed on Linux at roughly 4,500 tabs due to internal application limits, well short of the 6,000-tab record set years prior on simpler static web pages.
Web Heavyweights and the VRAM Crisis
This extreme benchmark highlights a critical shift in consumer technology: the modern web is incredibly heavy. Even with 1.5 TB of physical RAM and 192 CPU cores sitting at less than 20% utilization, the software stack broke. Cloudflare protections blocked automated traffic, and modern web scripts bloated memory footprints.
More importantly, graphics memory has emerged as a primary bottleneck for heavy multi-tab browsing. If you aim to keep countless media tabs active, a high-capacity GPU is just as critical as system RAM. Modern browsers rely heavily on hardware acceleration; when VRAM empties, the entire system collapses.
- AMD EPYC 9684X
- 14%· products
- Floatplane
- 14%· products
- Google Chrome
- 14%· products
- Linux
- 14%· products
- LTT Store
- 14%· products
- Other topics
- 29%

How many Tabs with 1.5 TB of RAM?
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