Gen 5 SSDs: Fast on Paper, Useless in Real Life?

Gen 5 SSDs are mostly wasted money for gamers and typical PC users because most real-world desktop tasks do not need that much sequential bandwidth, and game load times usually improve little or not at all compared with good Gen 4 drives. The speed advantage is real on paper, but in normal use the bottleneck is usually the CPU, game engine, asset decompression, or just the fact that games are not designed to continuously stream data fast enough to saturate Gen 5.

Why gamers usually gain little

For gaming, the jump from Gen 4 to Gen 5 rarely changes FPS, and load-time differences are often tiny enough to be hard to notice [9][10]. Even sources focused on Gen 5 SSDs note that in most games the difference is around a fraction of a second to about a second in some cases, which does not justify the price premium for most players. If your goal is smoother gameplay, a better GPU, CPU, more RAM, or simply a fast Gen 4 NVMe SSD usually gives more value.

Who actually benefits

Gen 5 SSDs make sense for people who move or process very large data all the time, such as 6K/8K video editors, heavy content creators, workstation users, developers working with huge builds or virtual machines, and some data-heavy professional workflows [5][10]. These users can see faster file transfers, quicker cache handling, and shorter wait times when working with giant projects [5]. In those cases, the extra bandwidth can translate into real productivity gains rather than just higher benchmark numbers [5][10].

What makes them less attractive

They are also more expensive and can run hotter, which often means bigger heatsinks or more careful motherboard/airflow planning [3][10]. That matters because many users pay a lot more for performance they will almost never feel in daily use [10]. So for a normal gaming PC, Gen 5 is often a “nice to have” rather than a smart upgrade.

Practical verdict

If you are building for gaming, browsing, office work, or general multitasking, a good Gen 4 SSD is the rational choice. If you routinely work with massive files and your time is money, Gen 5 can be worth it. In short: gamers don’t need Gen 5, creators and workstation users sometimes do.

Simple rule

  • Buy Gen 5 if you regularly edit huge videos, transfer huge files, or run storage-heavy professional workloads.
  • Skip Gen 5 if you mainly game, browse, watch media, or do everyday PC tasks.
  • If you want the best value today, a strong Gen 4 SSD is usually the sweet spot.

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