Deleted member 110222
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Title.
If you need more information then do ask.
Cheers.
If you need more information then do ask.
Cheers.
It does seem that Samsung is a good brand.
Agree?
Another question. If I can afford it, might I as well get a 500GB, or around that number, SSD? You know, given my game collection is only going to get bigger.
I would say yes. For exactly that reason - plus games themselves are only going to get bigger.
Another question. If I can afford it, might I as well get a 500GB, or around that number, SSD? You know, given my game collection is only going to get bigger.
By splitting the drives into two, you're twice as likely to lose half as much... I wouldn't worry about it. Make sure you take backups as you would against any drive from failing. Fortunately for games you don't need to backup everything, just the save games, and a lot of those can be cloud based anyway (particularly on steam).
You can go totally OTT like me if you want. 512GB OS and applications SSD. 1 TB SSD for *most* steam games, and I got another 960GB SSD for the rest... yes, I have a lot of steam games and not enough time for it! But I like to have everything installed so I don't have to wait if I ever do have time. I find ebuyer worth keeping an eye on, if you're not in a hurry. As mentioned earlier, I just ordered a Sandisk 240GB for £44 delivered. The 960GB was £150 on Black Friday sale but they have been as low as £160 since, that I saw anyway.
The flip side to this argument is that games aren't usually that sensitive to disk speed apart from loading, so a hard disk could be more than good enough. Even with a smaller SSD, you could just prioritise what is more important on there, and use a regular hard disk for the rest.
The chances of SSD breaking down comes down to two things: wear and tear, and just random luck. Can't do anything about the last part, but on wear and tear, any half decent drive will have enough life not to worry about, and even then you can see that wear indicator and react to it in plenty of time.