PlayStation 5 owners have been scrambling to lock down a premium M.2 SSD following the release of a beta software update that finally unlocked the next-gen console’s expansion slot last week, but recent tests have revealed that even cheaper SSDs that don’t quite match Sony’s 5,500 MB/s sequential read speed recommendation can provide a level of performance that’s consistent with both the internal SSD and higher-priced models.
This is what The Verge discovered after testing one of the cheapest PCIe Gen4 SSDs it could find, ADATA’s XPG Gammix S50 lite, which features a 3,900 MB/s read speed and 3,200 MB/s write speed. Despite these relatively unremarkable specifications, the loading times of the XPG Gammix were not much different than the ones granted by the PS5’s internal SSD and a 5,000 MB/s Sabrent Rocket.
Amusingly, the XPG Gammix even managed to load select titles such as Insomniac Games’ Spider-Man spin-off, Spider-Man: Miles Morales, faster than the competition. Insomniac’s director of core technology Mike Fitzgerald has warned that slower Gen 4 M.2 drives could result in slower loading times by as much as 15 percent in certain portions of one of its other next-gen titles, Ratchet and Clank: Rift Apart, however.
PS5 SSD Load Times
Game | Internal SSD | Sabrent Rocket | XPG Gammix S50 Lite | External HDD |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ratchet and Clank: Rift Apart | 14 sec | 14 sec | 15 sec | N/A |
Returnal | 30 sec | 30 sec | 31 sec | N/A |
Spider-Man: Miles Morales (PS5) | 19 sec | 18 sec | 17 sec | N/A |
FFVII Remake (PS5) | 10 sec | 10 sec | 10 sec | N/A |
FFVII Remake (PS4) | 43 sec | 43 sec | 43 sec | 58 sec |
Yakuza Like a Dragon (PS5) | 31 sec | 32 sec | 32 sec | N/A |
Yakuza Like a Dragon (PS4) | 37 sec | 37 sec | 35 sec | 52 sec |
We tried some below-spec Gen4 M.2 drives as well and saw up to 15% slower loading in the most SSD-stressing areas of the game. Not too shabby, but keep a close eye on technical specs if you’re making an SSD purchase, as our game does rely on high-quality storage. 🙏
— Mike Fitzgerald (@fitzymj) July 29, 2021
Surprisingly, even the slowest compatible SSD we could find had near-identical load times to the one Sony includes in the box. Sometimes it’s a second slower, sometimes a second or two faster, but basically it’s a total wash. Hopping through dimensions in Ratchet and Clank: Rift Apart, I saw no appreciable difference with the slowest SSD in gameplay, either.
Source: The Verge