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Storage

Fast, reliable storage keeps your OS snappy, games loading quickly, and files safe. Browse NVMe SSDs, SATA SSDs, and HDDs across all capacities — from compact 500 GB drives to multi-terabyte arrays for media and backups. Compare sequential read/write speeds, endurance ratings, and form factors to build the ideal storage tier for your use case. Our PC for Video Editing Under $1500 guide walks through balancing speed and capacity effectively.

Storage

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Frequently Asked Questions

NVMe SSD vs SATA SSD — which should I choose?
NVMe SSDs (M.2 PCIe) are significantly faster than SATA SSDs, with sequential read speeds of 3,000–7,000 MB/s versus 500–600 MB/s for SATA. For your primary OS and game drive, NVMe is recommended. SATA SSDs are a cost-effective choice for secondary storage.
How much storage do I need for gaming?
A 1 TB NVMe SSD is a practical starting point for most gamers, holding the OS plus 8–15 large modern titles. If you have a large game library, consider 2 TB or add a secondary HDD for long-term storage.
Do I need an HDD if I have an SSD?
Not required, but an HDD is a cost-effective way to add bulk storage for media, backups, and games you play infrequently. A 2–4 TB HDD paired with a 1 TB NVMe SSD is a popular combination for value-focused builds.
What is PCIe Gen 4 vs Gen 5 for SSDs?
PCIe Gen 5 SSDs reach sequential speeds above 10,000 MB/s, roughly double Gen 4. Real-world gains in gaming are currently minimal, but Gen 5 benefits demanding workloads like large file transfers or video editing. Gen 4 SSDs remain the price-performance sweet spot for most users.
Does SSD brand matter?
Reputable brands like Samsung, WD, Seagate, and Crucial have strong reliability track records. Look for drives with at least 600 TBW endurance rating for your capacity tier and check for a DRAM cache if peak sustained write speeds matter for your workload.