Certo, perchè conta l'XMP Della mobo non la cpu.
Ti riporto quanto segue:
Yes, but only in motherboards that support memory overclocking. This means you need a B560, H570, Z490 or Z590 motherboard in order to run the i7–10700F with 3200MHz RAM.
Depending on how you specifically define it, you could say that the i7 10700F only “supports” RAM up to 2933MHz (which is Intel’s official spec), but can be used with faster memory if your motherboard supports memory overclocking.
(unbuffered, non-ECC) DDR4 memory modules rated to run at 3200MHz will still work with the i7–10700F in motherboards that don’t support memory overclocking (H410, H510, B460, H470), but the RAM will be limited to a maximum speed of 2933MHz. Unless you’re buying 3200MHz to try to get higher-quality memory chips which you can manually tune to lower latency (e.g. buying 3200MHz CL14 to get Samsung b-die), it would usually be better to buy 3000MHz RAM if you will use a motherboard that doesn’t allow memory overclocking.
When you first install RAM, it will usually default to a slow “JEDEC” spec (2133MHz is the most common), and you will need to enable XMP (extreme memory profile) in your BIOS, or manually set the memory module to run at a higher speed. This happens to ensure memory compatibility and stability with low-end motherboards and CPUs that don’t support the full speed of the memory module.
JEDEC 3200MHz memory kits which will run at 3200MHz by default (in motherboards that support 3200MHz RAM) are available, and so are JEDEC 2933MHz kits, but JEDEC has much higher latency than XMP, so is slower, and is often more expensive as well. JEDEC DDR4 RAM uses 1.2V, and XMP RAM uses 1.35V or higher.