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Yes, this is a pricey 1 TB drive, but it’s also a relatively affordable PCIe 5.0 SSD. Just get a load of those read/write speeds! If you’re still not convinced, be sure to have a read of Zak’s review.
Key specs: 1 TB | PCIe 5.0 M.2 2280 | Up to 14,700 MB/s read | Up to 13,300 MB/s write | DRAMView Deal
I’ve been keeping track of SSD prices for some time now, and unfortunately, the ceiling for what I consider a ‘good’ price on an SSD these days has risen quite a bit. The memory supply crisis is still raging, making the downright sensible SSD prices of last year feel more and more like a distant memory with every passing day.
As such, doling out more than 200 bucks for any SSD feels like a lot right now, but I’d make the case that spending that money on a speedy PCIe 5.0 drive. Right now, you can scoop up a 1 TB Samsung 9100 Pro for $207 at Amazon.
We’re curating all the best Prime Day PC gaming deals here
It’s worth noting that Amazon Germany is selling a PCIe 5.0 SSD from Crucial for less cash than this. But if you’re not feeling overly confident about shipping from Deutschland, the 9100 Pro is still well worth considering. It offers sustained read/write speeds of up to 14,700 MB/s and 13,400 MB/s, respectively.
In his Samsung 9100 Pro 2 TB SSD review, our Zak offers a handy technical breakdown of what makes this drive so nippy, but in short: dedicated LPDDR4X cache memory plus a 365 GB pseudo-SLC cache makes SSD go ‘brrr’. As a result, Zak writes that this drive “absolutely [rips] across sequential performance.”
Unfortunately for PC gamers, the 8100 Pro’s random 4K performance is a bit of a let-down in comparison. Game loads are rarely pulling up files all neatly lined up, which is why random 4K performance tends to be a more valuable metric for us.
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Zak writes, “The 2 TB unit [lands] at a fairly average 88 MB/s on the read and an astoundingly low, 237 MB/s on the write. That’s not great for a drive that’s meant to be this ‘fast’. In contrast, every other Phison-based SSD I’ve tested lands a write speed in the 300 MB/s and above range. In fact, every SSD I’ve ever tested here sits around that mark, even the 4.0 drives. That is not ideal.”
As such, this drive may be better suited to supplementing the storage you already have rather than outright replacing your main internal SSD. Otherwise, Zak was impressed by the drive’s efficient thermal performanceโthough notes that you’re better off avoiding the version that comes with a heatsink.
“The included heatsink is a bit naff,” he writes, adding, “This is one efficient drive when it’s cooled correctly. Given the heatsinked variant costs more though, I’d highly recommend opting to ignore that added extra, and instead bury it underneath a solid, dependable, thick, mobo heatsink instead.”
Some cheaper but slower alternatives…
Crucial’s P310 1TB M.2 PCIe 4.0 SSD is an absolute trooper of a drive, particularly if you’re after an affordable secondary storage solution for your games. It’s not great on writes or write performance, but for game loading, that’s not something you need to worry about. Shipping is from Germany, so don’t expect next-day delivery.
Key Specs: 1 TB | PCIe 4.0 M.2 2280 | Up to 7,100 MB/s read | Up to 6,000 MB/s write | DRAM-less View Deal
Crucial’s secret budget PCIe 5.0 SSD absolutely dominates in terms of affordable modern storage. If you’re looking for a drive that’s perfect for your OS, without taking out a small bank loan, this is it. With 276-layer TLC NAND chips and delivering some impressive read and write speeds, it absolutely rips along for a drive at this price.
Key Specs: 1 TB | PCIe 5.0 M.2 2280 | Up to 11,000 MB/s read | Up to 9,400 MB/s write | DRAM-less View Deal
๐Check out of Amazon’s gaming SSD deals๐
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