Nextorage NEM-PAB | 2 TB | NVMe | PCIe 4.0 | 7,300 MB/s read | 6,900 MB/s write | $249.99$139.99 at Newegg (save $110)
This Nextorage doesn't have any DRAM cache, making it a little less responsive than the DRAM-equipped NEM-PA model, but it's absolutely no slouch though. Prices for this excellent SSD are really volatile but it's still one of the better-value 2 TB drives with a heatsink.
Price check: Amazon $139.99
WD Black SN850X | 2 TB | NVMe | PCIe 4.0 | 7,300 MB/s read | 6,300 MB/s write | $189.99$144.44 at Amazon (save $45.55)
It's been our favorite SSD for gaming for what seems like a decade or four, but the SN850X is still the best PCIe 4.0 SSD you can buy. Thanks to its healthy DRAM cache, it's a great choice as a boot drive with plenty of space for your game library.
Price check: Newegg $154.98 | Best Buy $159.99
When I'm asked to recommend an SSD, either as a replacement for a boot drive or something to just store games, I generally only ask a few questions first: What's your budget, and do you need to write lots of big files all the time to the drive?
The former will determine what capacity one can get and if it's around the $140 mark, then you're looking at 2 TB of storage. To be honest, that's something I recommend anyway as even 1 TB can fill up very quickly with some of the latest games.
However, the latter is about determining whether the SSD needs to have a DRAM chip. Without going into a long story about how NAND flash storage works, DRAM is only important if you want to have the best performance while writing lots of big files to the drive. I'm not talking about just a few gigabytes here and there, I'm talking hundreds and hundreds, over and over.
In the old days of SSDs, DRAM was required to store the map of where all the data is located on the drive but modern SSDs all support something called Host Memory Buffer (HMB), which stores the map in a small part of your PC's system memory. It's still a little quicker to have it in some RAM local to
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