They’re the peerless champions in any kind of situations, hands down, no holds barred, and so on and so forth. Oh, that’s a lot of money The first and foremost reason, of course – the price tag. NVMe SSDs can burn a real hole in your pocket, especially for the larger-capacity models, which are a requirement for gaming these days when every other AAA title come out to an installation size of about 50 GB and upwards. And that’s just on release day; Let’s not even talk about DLCs. The Crucial MX300 1TB runs at around $280, whereas the Plextor M8Pe 1TB, tailored for gaming, will set you back around $480 (or more, depending on the supplier). That’s a significant hike in cost – which many can afford, but the question is, will shelling out that extra give you your money’s worth? Or would you be better off investing it somewhere else – if, for example, you used it on other gaming hardware, would you get a better gaming performance for the same money? There’s a big difference; If you have that extra cash lying around, you could use it to make your rig better somewhere else that would give you more of a boost.
Let’s See How?
We talked about loading screens. Loading screens happen when the game in question is loading up the assets stored in your drive to create the virtual world the game takes place in. This is why SSD reduce loading screens to almost no time at all – their higher data transfer speed gets the job done much, much faster than an HDD. This transfer speed is even higher in the NVMe drives, but this doesn’t tally up in the actual load times because they happen too fast already. For example, assume that an HDD creates a 5-second loading screen for a game. This can get tedious in games like RPGs where you have to go through multiple loading screens in a single mission. The average HDD has a read speed of about 125 MBps. An SSD brings this up to about 500 MBps at least. That’s a 4X speed boost which affects the load time as 5 seconds/4 = 1.25 seconds. An average NVMe drive has a read speed of 2 GBps, or 16X that of the HDD. The load time for the game now would be 5 seconds/16 = 0.32 seconds approximately. Yup, you’ve successfully shaved off less than one second with that extra $200. That’s not to mention the costs that go into getting an NVMe compatible motherboard. So the question becomes, would that cash be better off if you put it into use buying a better GPU or even another stick of RAM? TL;DR answer for those of you who are wondering: Yes, yes it would. And you know, even a 2.5 inch SATA SSDs can give a lot of advantages to your video game experience: they load up games faster, don’t bottleneck the game (it’s incredibly rare for storage to bottleneck games in the first place, although in really old HDDs you may experience a freeze-frame every now and then in the most demanding games) and let you boot up faster.
#But They Do Not Affect Your FPS!!!
FPS stands for Frames Per Second (if you didn’t already know that STOP READING RIGHT NOW BECAUSE YOU HAVE NO BUSINESS BUILDING A GAMING RIG
I dunno about you, but I do not like when load times are several minutes long. The entire arguement was on money, but prices come down and some people have money to burn. Even assuming prices stayed sky high (which they did not), a person with a 2080Ti and 9900KS isn’t gonna have any upgrading on framerates so may as well focus on cutting load times down, a blanket “don’t get an NVMe” is, even disrgarding the huge drop in prices, a bad idea.
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